Difference between revisions of "Phonological Alternations"

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<br/>
 
<br/>
 
s~s
 
s~s
 
<br>
  +
ʔ~ʔ
   
 
We still need to get the sg vs. pl. forms of verbs starting with:
 
We still need to get the sg vs. pl. forms of verbs starting with:
 
<br/>
 
<br/>
 
q
 
q
<br/>
 
ʔ, or vowel initial
 
   
 
It seems that verb roots (as seen with singular subjects) cannot start with voiceless implosives or prenasalized stops.
 
It seems that verb roots (as seen with singular subjects) cannot start with voiceless implosives or prenasalized stops.

Revision as of 19:34, 24 October 2012

Phonological Alternations

Morphophonology

Sereer has salient alternations in the initial consonants of noun and verb stems. These alternations appear to be morphologically conditioned in a lexically specified manner, since they occur in several different segmental contexts whose only common element is being within a morphologically derived environment (e.g. plurality in both nouns and verbs; addition of apparent nominalizing suffixes to verbs).

Nouns

(discussion on sg./pl. alternations here)

Deverbal nouns: A noun can be formed from (any?) verb by affixing a prefix a- to the verb root, and altering the initial consonant of the root.

verb meaning noun meaning
ret go atet a trip, "going"
ɗing fence (in) aƭing fence
tos gather manure atos pile of manure
piis draw a line apiis line
weʄ swim abeʄ a swim, swimming

Further alternations remain to be seen, but it appears that the same sorts of alternations seen elsewhere in the language are present here (r,d > t ; voiced implosive > voiceless implosives, etc.)

There are some less straightforward alternations involving not only the initial consonant:

rain (v): deɓ
rain (n): ateƥ

slap (v): faɗ
slap (n): ombaƭ

Verbs

The initial consonant of verb roots can vary based on whether the subject is singular or plural. Non-implosives alternate with prenasalized stops, and implosives alternate with their voiceless counterparts. So far, these alternations appear to be completely predictable.

sg.~pl.
f~mb
b~mb
w~mb
ɉ~ɲɉ
χ~ɴɢ
ɗ~ƭ
ɓ~ƥ
ʄ~ƈ
r~nd
d~nd
g~ng

Invariant:
j~j
l~l
m~m
n~n
ŋ~ŋ
ɲ~ɲ
p~p
t~t
k~k
c~c
s~s
ʔ~ʔ

We still need to get the sg vs. pl. forms of verbs starting with:
q

It seems that verb roots (as seen with singular subjects) cannot start with voiceless implosives or prenasalized stops.

Postverbal Affixes

A number of postverbal affixes exhibit a morphophonological alternation between a -VC and -C form. The -VC form appears after a consonant, and the -C form after a vowel.

1st sg. subject: -(u)m

2nd sg. object: -(o)ng

3rd sg. object: -(i)n

Causative: -(i)n

Reciprocal: -(i)r

Itive: -(i)k

Instrumental applicative: -(i)t

Reversive: -(i)t