Volume 12 Issue 1 (2014)
DOI:10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.439
Note: Linguistic Discovery uses Unicode characters
to represent phonetic symbols. Please see Optimizing Display
for requirements to accurately reproduce this page.
Problem Set: Sui Adjective ModifiersJames N. Stanford Dartmouth College Sui is a Tai-Kadai language of southwest China with an elaborate
system of adjective modifiers, including modifiers that rhyme with their base
adjectives. The onsets of these rhyming modifiers show patterns which are not
fully predictable, but they fall within a certain range of morphophonological
possibilities.
(1) Determine what types of onsets are preferred when the
modifier rhymes with the base adjective. Caution: Look for overall patterns, not
a fully predictive rule. Asterisks (*) indicate forms that are unattested.
| ʁɑ:t | ‘agile’ | ʁɑ:t
ʨɑ:t | ‘very
agile’ |
| ʔmɛj | ‘selfish’ | ʔmɛj
tɛj | ‘very selfish’
|
| fɑ:ŋ | ‘wide’ | fɑ:ŋ
ljɑ:ŋ | ‘very
wide’ | | tom | ‘dull’ | tom ʔnom | ‘very
dull’ | | mbu | ‘bulging’ | mbu
ʨhu | ‘very
bulging’ | | lɑp | ‘garrulous’ | lɑp tɑp | ‘very
garrulous’ | | lɑp | ‘garrulous’ | *lɑp lɑp | ‘very
garrulous’ | | pjɛ:k | ‘dirty’ | pjɛ:k
ljɛ:k | ‘very
dirty’ | | m̥ow | ‘crude,
rash’ | m̥ow low | ‘very
crude/rash’ | | mbjɑ | ‘blurry’ | mbjɑ
ʨɑ | ‘very
blurry’ | | vɑ:ŋ | ‘tall’ | vɑ:ŋ
tɕɑ:ŋ | ‘very
tall’ | | fɑ:ŋ | ‘wide’ | fɑ:ŋ
ljɑ:ŋ | ‘very
wide’ | | xom | ‘sour’ | xom tom | ‘very
sour’ | | xom | ‘sour’ | xom
ʔnom | ‘very
sour’ | | qɔn | ‘short’ | qɔn
ʔnjɔn | ‘very
short’ | | mət | ‘tight’ | mət
tɕət | ‘very
tight’ | | pən | ‘stupid’ | pən
ʔnən | ‘very
stupid’ | | ʔbɑj | ‘crooked’ | ʔbɑj tjɑj
| ‘very
crooked’ | | ləŋ | ‘careless’ | ləŋ
təŋ | ‘very
careless’ | | ləŋ | ‘careless’ | *ləŋ
ləŋ | ‘very
careless’ | | ləŋ
| ‘straight’ | ləŋ
tɕəŋ | ‘very
straight’ |
(2) Now adapt your answer in (1) to account for the
following cases found in a small minority of the Sui data:
| ʔnəm | ‘dark/black’ | ʔnəm
fəm | ‘very
dark/black’ |
| ʔnəm | ‘dark/black’ | *ʔnəm
ʔnəm | ‘very
dark/black’ |
| tɕoŋ | ‘skinny’ | tɕoŋ
fjoŋ | ‘very
skinny’ |
| tɕoŋ | ‘skinny’ | *tɕoŋ
tɕoŋ | ‘very
skinny’ |
| tɕəm | ‘fierce’ | tɕəm
ɣəm | ‘very
fierce’ |
| tɕəm | ‘fierce’ | *tɕəm
tɕəm | ‘very
fierce’ |
| tiw | ‘dried
up’ | tiw fiw | ‘very dried
up’ |
| tiw | ‘dried
up’ | *tiw tiw | ‘very dried
up’ |
[Data from Stanford, James N. (2007). Sui adjective
reduplication as poetic morpho-phonology. Journal of East Asian
Linguistics 16(2):87-111. doi:10.1007/s10831-007-9008-2] Suggested Answer: (1) The onsets of the modifiers in data set (1) are all
coronals, which is often considered to be a cross-linguistically unmarked place
of articulation. Therefore, although the Sui lexicon varies in the specific
choice of coronal for a given adjective modifier, there is a strong tendency for
the onset of the adjective modifier to be unmarked (coronal). In addition, note
that when the onset of the base adjective is a coronal itself, the onset of the
modifier must change in manner of articulation, e.g.,
ləŋ təŋ (*ləŋ
ləŋ). In this way, the onsets of the base and the modifier
remain distinct, even though they are both coronals. (2) The second data set looks further into what happens when
a base adjective has a coronal onset. In both (1) and (2), the onset of the
modifier must be changed so that it is distinct from the onset of the base
adjective. For the examples in data set (1), this was accomplished by changing
the place of articulation (ləŋ
təŋ) in the onset of the modifier. But in the examples in data
set (2), the onset of the modifier differs from the base onset in both place of
articulation and manner of articulation (the modifier’s onsets are
fricatives here). These examples represent a small minority of the adjective
modifiers in Sui, but they show that the coronal requirement for the modifier
onset can sometimes be violated when the base onset is a coronal. |