An diofar eadar na mùthaidhean a rinneadh air "Vowel Length, Stress Placement and Compound Nouns"
(10 mùthaidhean eadar-mheadhanach le 2 chleachdaiche eile nach eil 10 'gan sealltainn) | |||
Loidhne 1: | Loidhne 1: | ||
− | Most of us have come across this problem in various shapes and guises. Not so much vowel length and stress placement | + | Most of us have come across this problem in various shapes and guises. Not so much vowel length and stress placement which learners, and indeed native spearkers, often consider to be somewhat "esoteric" issues. But, questions often arise regarding whether or not to use a hyphen or whether lenition affects the second word of a hyphenated word. Case? We can't promise to reveal all, but we'll have a go at giving a few good pointers. To begin with, I'm afraid that we have to consider the two "esoteric" issues because they're crucial for understanding and applying the third and fourth issues. |
− | Before you groan and click somewhere else, consider that every language has sound rules | + | ==Dim Sum?== |
+ | Before you groan and click somewhere else, consider that every language has sound rules. Phonology is the study of sound rules. Many phonological rules are specific to the respective language. These rules are just as much part of a language, and important to it, as a case system, tenses, or the words themselves. Bugger them up and you mess with the language, big time. So, even though it may be more elusive than the genitive case, phonological rules are very important. | ||
− | Generally this isn't an issue for healthy languages because the rules are in the speakers brains | + | Generally this isn't an issue for healthy languages because the rules are in the speakers brains. The rules get applied unconsciously and correctly. So, neologisms that the language may have to come up with, or words that get borrowed from other languages, get remodelled to fit and conform to the native rules. For example, consider Cantonese which has phonological rules drastically different from English (and vice versa) but has borrowed a number of words from English (and vice versa). Because these languages are so different, borrowing in either direction involves streamlining word pronunciations. The result of streamlining is sometimes rather amusing to the speaker of the other language. Consider these examples: |
{| style="width: 25%;" border="0" align="center" | {| style="width: 25%;" border="0" align="center" | ||
Loidhne 43: | Loidhne 44: | ||
|} | |} | ||
− | Wonderful, isn't it? Cantonese words can't be any longer than three sounds, so any long foreign words have to be broken up. Consonant clusters are not allowed | + | Wonderful, isn't it? Cantonese words can't be any longer than three sounds, so any long foreign words have to be broken up. Consonant clusters are not allowed and neither are words ending in anything but vowels, n, m or p, t, k. So lift becomes <span style="color: #6600CC;">*lif</span> and then <span style="color: #6600CC;">līp</span> because -p is the closest thing Cantonese has to a final -f. On the other hand, English just flounders with the tones. Completely. What's a clear vowel? And why doesn't Cantonese have any voiced stops??? ... But I digress. |
− | And no, this isn't a diatribe against loanwords either | + | And no, this isn't a diatribe against loanwords either. All languages borrow, unless they're in complete isolation, a privilege few enjoy. But to get back to the actual question. |
==Unaccented Syllables and Long Vowels== | ==Unaccented Syllables and Long Vowels== | ||
− | Most Gaelic textbooks will go as far as telling you that Gaelic is very neat and always has word stress on the first syllable | + | Most Gaelic textbooks will go as far as telling you that Gaelic is very neat and always has word stress on the first syllable. And perhaps they may even add that a hyphen indicates that the stress has shifted to the second element. But that's generally as far as they go and assume "you'll just pick up the rest by ear". Sorry, you won't. |
− | + | First, to sum up the basics. Indeed, Gaelic has primary stress on the first syllable of a word when there is no space, hyphen, or anything like that in the word. Here are some prototypical words: <span style="color: #008000;">taigh, cù, màthair, bàta, craobhan, cupannan, iarraidh, agam, leabhraichean</span> and so on. Now, think hard. Have you ever seen a Gaelic word (that wasn't a loanword, in case you were going to say <span style="color: #008000;">tombaca</span> or <span style="color: #008000;">buntàta</span>) with a long vowel anywhere but the first syllable? Don't spend too long looking for one, you won't find one. That's because Gaelic phonologocal rules reveal that a native or nativised word may not have a long vowel in an unaccented syllable. This is important. | |
− | + | Second, there is a small, easily identifiable group of adverbs that have forward stress, indicated either by a hyphen or a capital letter in the middle of the word: <span style="color: #008000;">a-màireach, an-dé, an-uiridh, an-asgaidh, an-còmhnaidh, DiLuain, DiMàirt</span> (and that's why they have the capital letter and that's also why GOC stinks), and so on. So far, life is pretty straightforward. | |
− | + | However, life gets complicated once we go beyond straightforward "words". Let's try and be systematic about this. We can distinguish four broad categories: | |
==True Compounds== | ==True Compounds== | ||
− | These are words, | + | These are words, which are prefixes plus words, that have merged together in such a way that they are regarded as one single word. Their main characteristics are: |
#Stress on the first syllable | #Stress on the first syllable | ||
Loidhne 67: | Loidhne 68: | ||
==Close Compounds== | ==Close Compounds== | ||
− | + | This is where the people from Faclair na Pàrlamaid should tune in, as they didn't explain this bit at all. These are still regarded as compounds by native speakers and fluent speakers and are characterised by: | |
#Primary stress on the first syllable with secondary stress on the second element | #Primary stress on the first syllable with secondary stress on the second element | ||
− | #Short vowels of the second element are reduced slightly without obscuring their quality | + | #Short vowels of the second element are reduced slightly without obscuring their quality - for example, an [u] may get shorted slightly but will not be reduced to a schwa [ə] |
− | #Formerly long vowels of the second element are reduced to half-long or shorter vowels | + | #Formerly long vowels of the second element are reduced to half-long or shorter vowels - for example, <span style="color: #008000;">leth</span> [Lʲe] + <span style="color: #008000;">sùil</span> [suːl] » <span style="color: #008000;">leth-shùil</span> [ˈLʲeˌhuˑl] |
#Compulsory lenition of the second element | #Compulsory lenition of the second element | ||
Loidhne 77: | Loidhne 78: | ||
==Quasi Compounds== | ==Quasi Compounds== | ||
− | These are very much like Close Compounds, only | + | These are very much like Close Compounds, only their stress falls on the second element and the first element is reduced; so, you could regard them as a subclass of close compounds: |
#Primary stress on the second syllable with secondary stress on the first element | #Primary stress on the second syllable with secondary stress on the first element | ||
− | #Short vowels of the first element are reduced slightly without obscuring their quality | + | #Short vowels of the first element are reduced slightly without obscuring their quality - for example, <span style="color: #008000;">tìr</span> [tʲiːrʲ] + <span style="color: #008000;">mór</span> [moːr] » <span style="color: #008000;">tìr-mór</span> [ˌtʲirʲˈmoːr] |
#Formerly long vowels of the first element are reduced to half-long or shorter vowels | #Formerly long vowels of the first element are reduced to half-long or shorter vowels | ||
#Compulsory lenition of the second element except in compounds of a Noun-Adjective nature | #Compulsory lenition of the second element except in compounds of a Noun-Adjective nature | ||
Loidhne 87: | Loidhne 88: | ||
==Loose Compounds== | ==Loose Compounds== | ||
− | It's a moot point whether you want to call them compounds or not. | + | It's a moot point whether you want to call them compounds or not. They are compounds in the way that lenition occurs and the meaning of the second element is modified, but no stress shift occurs. Because these rules are a bit tricky to understand, people often hyphenate these words which would indicate stress shift, thus giving them the appearance of Compounds from groups 1-3. This group seems to contain most of the prefixed words in Gaelic, that is words which have bits like <span style="color: #008000;">ath-, do-, eu-, droch-</span>, and so on, preceding them. This is also another reason why these are often hyphenated, as there are a number of prominent ones which have become quasi-compounds, such as <span style="color: #008000;">do-dhèanta</span>. Characteristics are: |
#No stress shift occurs, for example <span style="color: #008000;">sàr-mhath</span> [saːr va] | #No stress shift occurs, for example <span style="color: #008000;">sàr-mhath</span> [saːr va] | ||
Loidhne 96: | Loidhne 97: | ||
==So what?== | ==So what?== | ||
− | Before we launch into more examples, | + | Before we launch into more examples, why is this important? Because it explains why we have to be careful about when to use hyphens. Care is needed not only because incorrect use of them tells a reader that stress is somewhere that it isn't but there is also a question of meaning involved. Consider the following English examples for a moment: |
{| style="width: 20%;" border="0" align="center" | {| style="width: 20%;" border="0" align="center" | ||
|- | |- | ||
Loidhne 111: | Loidhne 112: | ||
|} | |} | ||
− | Same words, but spelt differently - you tell me whether a green fly and a greenfly are the same things? And while a dungbeetle may not be pleasant, it's better than a dung beetle | + | Same words, but spelt differently - you tell me whether a green fly and a greenfly are the same things? And while a dungbeetle may not be pleasant, it's better than a dung beetle, and a fishknife better than a knife made of fish. English has the added problem of sometimes using stress within a word to differentiate meanings, seen with pairs like permit and permit, construct and construct, and so on. |
− | Gaelic, in fact most languages, does something similar. | + | Gaelic, in fact most languages, does something similar. Sp far, the most obvious example I have come across is the difference in meaning between <span style="color: #008000;">Tha mi a' fuireach ann an taigh beag</span> and <span style="color: #008000;">Tha mi a' fuireach ann an taigh-beag</span>. I'd rather not live in the second. In writing Gaelic, you can afford not to pay attention to stress placement and simply learn that the word for toilet has a hyphen. However, when it comes to speaking, you have to know where to place the stress unless you want to make people quietly move away from you when you tell them about your new "home", at the next party you go to. |
− | Sooo ... in order to learn when to | + | Sooo ... in order to learn when to place hyphens, you really have to pay attention, first, to the way a word is pronounced and then deduce the spelling from that, not the other way round. |
− | + | Native speakers have a clear advantage; however, there are a few tricks for the learner that can hep. | |
− | + | In English, if you spell a word together (with no hyphen) or if there's stress shift in the English compound, you can be relatively sure that if the corresponding Gaelic word is composed of two words there will be stress shift, for example, glasshouse - <span style="color: #008000;">taigh-glaine</span> [təˈgLaNʲə] as opposed to a glass house - <span style="color: #008000;">taigh glaine</span> [tɤj gLaNʲə]. | |
If both words are nouns, the first one feminine and the second one behaves like an adjective after a feminine noun, you have a close compound because nouns only behave like adjectives in close compounds. Unfortunately, this doesn't help if the first element is masculine: <span style="color: #008000;">cainnt-chluich</span> 'play on words' [ˈkaiNʲdʲxLɪç] but <span style="color: #008000;">uisge-beatha</span>. | If both words are nouns, the first one feminine and the second one behaves like an adjective after a feminine noun, you have a close compound because nouns only behave like adjectives in close compounds. Unfortunately, this doesn't help if the first element is masculine: <span style="color: #008000;">cainnt-chluich</span> 'play on words' [ˈkaiNʲdʲxLɪç] but <span style="color: #008000;">uisge-beatha</span>. |
Am mùthadh mu dheireadh on 09:10, 29 dhen t-Samhain 2013
Most of us have come across this problem in various shapes and guises. Not so much vowel length and stress placement which learners, and indeed native spearkers, often consider to be somewhat "esoteric" issues. But, questions often arise regarding whether or not to use a hyphen or whether lenition affects the second word of a hyphenated word. Case? We can't promise to reveal all, but we'll have a go at giving a few good pointers. To begin with, I'm afraid that we have to consider the two "esoteric" issues because they're crucial for understanding and applying the third and fourth issues.
Dim Sum?
Before you groan and click somewhere else, consider that every language has sound rules. Phonology is the study of sound rules. Many phonological rules are specific to the respective language. These rules are just as much part of a language, and important to it, as a case system, tenses, or the words themselves. Bugger them up and you mess with the language, big time. So, even though it may be more elusive than the genitive case, phonological rules are very important.
Generally this isn't an issue for healthy languages because the rules are in the speakers brains. The rules get applied unconsciously and correctly. So, neologisms that the language may have to come up with, or words that get borrowed from other languages, get remodelled to fit and conform to the native rules. For example, consider Cantonese which has phonological rules drastically different from English (and vice versa) but has borrowed a number of words from English (and vice versa). Because these languages are so different, borrowing in either direction involves streamlining word pronunciations. The result of streamlining is sometimes rather amusing to the speaker of the other language. Consider these examples:
English | Cantonese |
sofa | sō fáh |
lift (elevator) | līp |
taxi | dīk síh |
cream soda | geih līm sō dá |
Jesus | Yèh Sōu |
Spain | Sāi Bāan Ngàh |
chocolate | jyù gū līk |
Cantonese | English |
wohk | wok |
Hēung Góng | Hong Kong |
dím sàm | dim sum |
gām gwāt | kumquat |
Bāk Gīng | Peking |
màh jéuk | majong |
Hàhng Sàng | Hang Seng |
Wonderful, isn't it? Cantonese words can't be any longer than three sounds, so any long foreign words have to be broken up. Consonant clusters are not allowed and neither are words ending in anything but vowels, n, m or p, t, k. So lift becomes *lif and then līp because -p is the closest thing Cantonese has to a final -f. On the other hand, English just flounders with the tones. Completely. What's a clear vowel? And why doesn't Cantonese have any voiced stops??? ... But I digress.
And no, this isn't a diatribe against loanwords either. All languages borrow, unless they're in complete isolation, a privilege few enjoy. But to get back to the actual question.
Unaccented Syllables and Long Vowels
Most Gaelic textbooks will go as far as telling you that Gaelic is very neat and always has word stress on the first syllable. And perhaps they may even add that a hyphen indicates that the stress has shifted to the second element. But that's generally as far as they go and assume "you'll just pick up the rest by ear". Sorry, you won't.
First, to sum up the basics. Indeed, Gaelic has primary stress on the first syllable of a word when there is no space, hyphen, or anything like that in the word. Here are some prototypical words: taigh, cù, màthair, bàta, craobhan, cupannan, iarraidh, agam, leabhraichean and so on. Now, think hard. Have you ever seen a Gaelic word (that wasn't a loanword, in case you were going to say tombaca or buntàta) with a long vowel anywhere but the first syllable? Don't spend too long looking for one, you won't find one. That's because Gaelic phonologocal rules reveal that a native or nativised word may not have a long vowel in an unaccented syllable. This is important.
Second, there is a small, easily identifiable group of adverbs that have forward stress, indicated either by a hyphen or a capital letter in the middle of the word: a-màireach, an-dé, an-uiridh, an-asgaidh, an-còmhnaidh, DiLuain, DiMàirt (and that's why they have the capital letter and that's also why GOC stinks), and so on. So far, life is pretty straightforward.
However, life gets complicated once we go beyond straightforward "words". Let's try and be systematic about this. We can distinguish four broad categories:
True Compounds
These are words, which are prefixes plus words, that have merged together in such a way that they are regarded as one single word. Their main characteristics are:
- Stress on the first syllable
- Long vowels only occur in the first syllable, all other vowels are short
- Short vowels are often reduced to weak vowels such as [ə] for example eu [eː] + trom [trɔum] » aotrom [ɯːdrəm]
- Compulsory lenition of the second element
aotram (eu=trom), dùbhlan (dubh=slàn), eucoir (eu=còir), anmoch (an=moch), earthuath (ear=tuath), neochiontach (neo=ciontach), mórchuis (mór=cùis), seanair (sean=athair), cùlaist (cùl=àite), leisgeul (leth=sgeul)...
Close Compounds
This is where the people from Faclair na Pàrlamaid should tune in, as they didn't explain this bit at all. These are still regarded as compounds by native speakers and fluent speakers and are characterised by:
- Primary stress on the first syllable with secondary stress on the second element
- Short vowels of the second element are reduced slightly without obscuring their quality - for example, an [u] may get shorted slightly but will not be reduced to a schwa [ə]
- Formerly long vowels of the second element are reduced to half-long or shorter vowels - for example, leth [Lʲe] + sùil [suːl] » leth-shùil [ˈLʲeˌhuˑl]
- Compulsory lenition of the second element
leth-shùil, dealbh-chluich, droch-rud, beul-aithris, ionmholta/ion-mholta...
Quasi Compounds
These are very much like Close Compounds, only their stress falls on the second element and the first element is reduced; so, you could regard them as a subclass of close compounds:
- Primary stress on the second syllable with secondary stress on the first element
- Short vowels of the first element are reduced slightly without obscuring their quality - for example, tìr [tʲiːrʲ] + mór [moːr] » tìr-mór [ˌtʲirʲˈmoːr]
- Formerly long vowels of the first element are reduced to half-long or shorter vowels
- Compulsory lenition of the second element except in compounds of a Noun-Adjective nature
taigh-beag, taigh-sgoile, tìr-mór, co-dhùnadh...
Loose Compounds
It's a moot point whether you want to call them compounds or not. They are compounds in the way that lenition occurs and the meaning of the second element is modified, but no stress shift occurs. Because these rules are a bit tricky to understand, people often hyphenate these words which would indicate stress shift, thus giving them the appearance of Compounds from groups 1-3. This group seems to contain most of the prefixed words in Gaelic, that is words which have bits like ath-, do-, eu-, droch-, and so on, preceding them. This is also another reason why these are often hyphenated, as there are a number of prominent ones which have become quasi-compounds, such as do-dhèanta. Characteristics are:
- No stress shift occurs, for example sàr-mhath [saːr va]
- No vowel reduction occurs
- Lenition occurs but to a large extent depends on the prefix
sàr-mhath, droch-thubaiste, sìol-fhàs...
So what?
Before we launch into more examples, why is this important? Because it explains why we have to be careful about when to use hyphens. Care is needed not only because incorrect use of them tells a reader that stress is somewhere that it isn't but there is also a question of meaning involved. Consider the following English examples for a moment:
fish knife | fishknife |
key board | keyboard |
french man | frenchman |
dung beetle | dungbeetle |
green fly | greenfly |
Same words, but spelt differently - you tell me whether a green fly and a greenfly are the same things? And while a dungbeetle may not be pleasant, it's better than a dung beetle, and a fishknife better than a knife made of fish. English has the added problem of sometimes using stress within a word to differentiate meanings, seen with pairs like permit and permit, construct and construct, and so on.
Gaelic, in fact most languages, does something similar. Sp far, the most obvious example I have come across is the difference in meaning between Tha mi a' fuireach ann an taigh beag and Tha mi a' fuireach ann an taigh-beag. I'd rather not live in the second. In writing Gaelic, you can afford not to pay attention to stress placement and simply learn that the word for toilet has a hyphen. However, when it comes to speaking, you have to know where to place the stress unless you want to make people quietly move away from you when you tell them about your new "home", at the next party you go to.
Sooo ... in order to learn when to place hyphens, you really have to pay attention, first, to the way a word is pronounced and then deduce the spelling from that, not the other way round.
Native speakers have a clear advantage; however, there are a few tricks for the learner that can hep.
In English, if you spell a word together (with no hyphen) or if there's stress shift in the English compound, you can be relatively sure that if the corresponding Gaelic word is composed of two words there will be stress shift, for example, glasshouse - taigh-glaine [təˈgLaNʲə] as opposed to a glass house - taigh glaine [tɤj gLaNʲə].
If both words are nouns, the first one feminine and the second one behaves like an adjective after a feminine noun, you have a close compound because nouns only behave like adjectives in close compounds. Unfortunately, this doesn't help if the first element is masculine: cainnt-chluich 'play on words' [ˈkaiNʲdʲxLɪç] but uisge-beatha.
Beagan gràmair | ||||||||||||
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