Gujarati phonology
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The Gujarati language is an Indo-Aryan language native to the Indian state of Gujarat. Much of its phonology is derived from Sanskrit.
| Front | Central | Back | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Close | i | u | ||
| Close-mid | e | ə | o | |
| Open-mid | ɛ | ɔ | ||
| Open | (æ) | ɑ | ||
- Sanskrit's phonemic vowel length has been lost.[1] Vowels are long when nasalized or in a final syllable.[2][2]
- Gujarati contrasts oral and nasal, and murmured and non-murmured vowels,[2] except for /e/ and /o/.[3] See #Murmur section for more.
- In absolute word-final position, the higher and lower vowels of the /e ɛ/ and /o ɔ/ sets vary.[3]
- /ɛ/ and /ɔ/ developed in the 15th century. when Gujarati developed into a distinct language from Old Gujarati (spoken by Gurjars in northern Gujarat and western Rajasthan).[4]
- English loanwords are a source of /æ/.[5]
Consonants
| Labial | Dental/ Alveolar |
Retroflex | Postal./ Palatal |
Velar | Glottal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | ɳ | ||||
| Plosive/ Affricate |
voiceless | p | t | ʈ | tʃ | k | |
| voiced | b | d | ɖ | dʒ | ɡ | ||
| aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | ʈʰ | tʃʰ | kʰ | ||
| murmured | bʱ | dʱ | ɖʱ | dʒʱ | ɡʱ | ||
| Fricative | voiceless | (f) | s | (ʂ) | ʃ | ||
| voiced | (z) | ɦ | |||||
| Approximant | ʋ | l | ɭ[6] | j | |||
| Flap | ɾ | ||||||
- A fourth nasal phoneme is postulated for the phones [ɲ, ŋ] and the nasalization of a preceding vowel [Ṽ].[7] Before velar and palatal stops, there is variation between these; e.g. [mɑ̃ɡʋũ]~[mɑŋɡʋũ] ('ask for'), [ɦĩtʃko]~[ɦĩɲtʃko] ('swing').[8]
- Stops occurring at first members of clusters followed by consonants other than /ɾ, j, ʋ/ are unreleased; they are optionally unreleased in final position. The absence of release entails deaspiration of voiceless stops.[8]
- Intervocalically and with murmuring of vowels, the voiced aspirated stops /ɡʱ, dʱ, bʱ/ have voiced spirant allophones [ɣ, ð, β]. Spirantization of non-palatal voiceless aspirates has been reported as well,[8] including /pʰ/ being usually realized as [f] in the standard dialect.[8]
- The two voiced retroflex plosives /ɖʱ, ɖ/ and the retroflex nasal /ɳ/ have flapped subphonemic allophones [ɽʱ, ɽ, ɽ̃]. The plosives /ɖʱ, ɖ/ are unflapped initially, geminated, and after nasal vowels; and flapped intervocalically, finally, and before or after other consonants.[6] The nasal /ɳ/ is unflapped before retroflex plosives and intervocalically, and in final position varies freely between flapped and unflapped.[7]
- /ʋ/ has [v] and [w] as allophones.[9]
- The distribution of sibilants varies over dialects and registers.
- Some dialects only have [s], others prefer [ʃ], while another system has them non-contrasting, with [ʃ] occurring contiguous to palatal segments. Retroflex [ʂ] still appears in clusters in which it precedes another retroflex: [spəʂʈ] ('clear').[10]
- Some speakers maintain [z] as well for Persian and English borrowings. Persian's /z/'s have by and large been transposed to /dʒ/ and /dʒʱ/: /dʒindɡi/ ('life') and /tʃidʒʱ/ ('thing'). The same cannot be so easily said for English: /tʃiz/ ('cheese'), which is rarely pronounced as /tʃidʒ/.
- Lastly, a colloquial register has [s], or both [s] and [ʃ], debuccalized to voiceless [h]. For educated speakers speaking this register, this replacement does not extend to Sanskrit borrowings.[8]
Phonotactical constraints include:
- /ɭ/ and /ɳ/ do not occur word-initially.[2]
- Clusters occur initially, medially, and finally. Geminates occur only medially.[2]
- Biconsonantal initial clusters beginning with stops have /ɾ/, /j/, /ʋ/, and /l/ as second members.[11] In addition to these, in loans from Sanskrit the clusters /ɡn/ and /kʃ/ may occur.
The occurrence of /ɾ/ as a second member in consonantal clusters is one of Gujarati's conservative features as a modern Indo-Aryan language. For example, languages used in Asokan inscriptions (3rd century BC) display contemporary regional variations, with words found in Gujarat's Girnar inscriptions containing clusters with /ɾ/ as the second member not having /ɾ/ in their occurrence in inscriptions elsewhere. This is maintained even to today, with Gujarati /tɾ/ corresponding to Hindi /t/ and /tt/.[12] - Initially, s clusters biconsonantally with /ɾ, j, ʋ, n, m/, and non-palatal voiceless stops.[11]
- Triconsonantal initial clusters include /stɾ, spɾ, smɾ/ - most of which occur in borrowings.[11]
- Geminates were previously treated as long consonants, but they are better analyzed as clusters of two identical segments. Two proofs for this:[7]
- The u in geminated uccār "pronunciation" sounds more like the one in clustered udgār ('utterance') than the one in shortened ucāṭ ('anxiety').
- Geminates behave towards (that is, disallow) [ə]-deletion like clusters do.
Gemination can serve as intensification. In some adjectives and adverbs, a singular consonant before the agreement vowel can be doubled for intensification.[13] #VCũ → #VCCũ.
| big | [moʈũ] | [moʈʈũ] | big |
| straight | [sidʱũ] | [siddʱũ] | straight |
| considerably | [kʰɑsũ] | [kʰɑssũ] | considerably |
Stress
The matter of stress is not quite clear:
- Stress is on the first syllable, except when it doesn't have /a/ and the second syllable does.[14]
- Stress is barely perceptible.[15]
- Stress typically falls on the penultimate syllable of a word; however, if the penultimate vowel in a word with more than two syllables is a schwa, stress falls on the preceding syllable.[16]
ə-deletion
Schwa-deletion, along with a-reduction and [ʋ]-insertion, is a phonological process at work in the combination of morphemes. It is a common feature among Indo-Aryan languages, referring to the deletion of a stem's final syllable's /ə/ before a suffix starting with a vowel.[14]
This does not apply for monosyllabic stems and consonant clusters. So, better put, #VCəC + V# → #VCCV#. It also doesn't apply when the addition is an o plural marker (see Gujarati grammar#Nouns) or e as an ergative case marker (see Gujarati grammar#Postpositions).[17] It sometimes doesn't apply for e as a locative marker.
| Stem | Suffix | Suffixed stem | C/V | Del | Notes | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| verb root | [keɭəʋ] | educate | [iʃ] | 1st person singular, future | [keɭʋiʃ] | will educate | CVCəC + VC → CVCCVC | Yes | Polysyllabic stem with /ə/ in its final syllable, with a suffix starting with a vowel (verbal declension). |
| [səmədʒ] | understand | [jɑ] | masculine plural, perfective | [səmdʒjɑ] | understood | CVCəC + CV → CVCCCV | Polysyllabic stem with /ə/ in its final syllable, with a suffix starting with a semi-vowel (verbal declension). | ||
| [utəɾ] | descend | [to] | masculine singular, imperfective | [utəɾto] | descending | VCəC + CV → VCəCCV | No | Suffix starting with a consonant. | |
| [təɾ] | swim, float | [ɛ] | 2nd person singular, present | [təɾɛ] | swimming, floating | CəC + V → CəCV | Monosyllabic. | ||
| [ʋəɾɳəʋ] | describe | [i] | feminine, perfective | [ʋəɾɳəʋi] | described | CVCCəC + VC → CVCCəCVC | Consonant cluster. | ||
| [ɑɭoʈ] | wallow, roll | [iʃũ] | 1st person plural, future | [ɑɭoʈiʃũ] | will wallow, roll | VCoC + VCV → VCoCVCV | Non-ə. | ||
| noun | [ɑɭəs] | laziness | [ũ] | adjectival marker | [ɑɭsũ] | lazy | VCəC + V → VCCV | Yes | Polysyllabic stem with /ə/ in its final syllable, with a suffix starting with a vowel (adjectival marking). |
| [ʋəkʰət] | time | [e] | locative marker | [ʋəkte] | at (the) time | CVCəC + V → CVCCV | Sometimes yes — e as a locative marker. | ||
| [diʋəs] | day | [diʋəse] | on (the) day | CVCəC + V → CVCəCV | No | Sometimes no — e as a locative marker. | |||
| [ɾəmət] | game | [o] | plural marker | [ɾəməto] | games | CVCəC + V → CVCəCV | Plural o number marker suffix. | ||
| adjective | [ɡəɾəm] | hot | [i] | noun marker | [ɡəɾmi] | heat | CVCəC + V → CVCCV | Yes | Polysyllabic stem with /ə/ in its final syllable, with a suffix starting with a vowel (noun marking). |
ɑ-reduction
[ʋ]-insertion
Between a stem ending in a vowel and its suffix starting with a vowel, a [ʋ] is inserted.[19] #V + V# → #VʋV#. This can be seen in the formation of passive and causative forms of verb stems.
| Stem | Suffix | Suffixed stem | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| see | [dʒo] | [ɑ] | [dʒoʋɑ] | be seen |
| sing | [ɡɑ] | [ɑɽ] | [ɡəʋɑɽ] | cause to sing |
The second example shows an ɑ-reduction as well.