Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Vowel
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
===Words without vowels=== {{see also|English words without vowels}} In rhotic dialects of English, as in Canada and the United States, there are many words such as ''bird, learn, girl, church, worst, worm, [[myrrh]]'' that some phoneticians analyze as having no vowels, only a syllabic consonant {{IPA|/ɹ̩/}}. However, others analyze these words instead as having a [[rhotic vowel]], {{IPA|/ɝː/}}. The difference may be partially one of dialect. There are a few such words that are disyllabic, like ''[[Wikt:cursor|cursor]], [[curtain]],'' and ''[[turtle]]:'' {{IPA|[ˈkɹ̩sɹ̩]}}, {{IPA|[ˈkɹ̩tn̩]}} and {{IPA|[ˈtɹ̩tl̩]}} (or {{IPA|[ˈkɝːsɚ]}}, {{IPA|[ˈkɝːtən]}}, and {{IPA|[ˈtɝːtəl]}}), and even a few that are trisyllabic, at least in some accents, such as ''purpler'' {{IPA|[ˈpɹ̩.pl̩.ɹ̩]}}, ''hurdler'' {{IPA|[ˈhɹ̩.dl̩.ɹ̩]}}, ''gurgler'' {{IPA|[ˈɡɹ̩.ɡl̩.ɹ̩]}}, and ''certainer'' {{IPA|[ˈsɹ̩.tn̩.ɹ̩]}}. The word ''and'' frequently contracts to a simple [[nasal consonant|nasal]] ''’n,'' as in ''lock 'n key'' {{IPA|[ˌlɒk ŋ ˈkiː]}}. Words such as ''will, have,'' and ''is'' regularly contract to ''’ll'' {{IPA|[l]}}, ''’ve'' {{IPA|[v]}}, and '''s'' {{IPA|[z]}}. However, none of them are pronounced alone without vowels, so they are not phonological words. [[onomatopoeia|Onomatopoeic]] words that can be pronounced alone, and that have no vowels or ars, include ''hmm, pst!, shh!, [[Dental clicks|tsk]]!,'' and ''zzz''. As in other languages, onomatopoeiae stand outside the normal phonotactics of English. There are other languages that form lexical words without vowel sounds. In [[Serbo-Croatian]], for example, the consonants {{IPA|[r]}} and {{IPA|[rː]}} (the difference is not written) can act as a [[syllable nucleus]] and carry rising or falling [[tone (linguistics)|tone]]; examples include the tongue-twister {{lang|sh|na vrh brda vrba mrda}} and geographic names such as {{lang|sh|[[Krk]]}}. In [[Czech language|Czech]] and [[Slovak language|Slovak]], either {{IPA|[l]}} or {{IPA|[r]}} can stand in for vowels: {{lang|cs|vlk}} {{IPA|[vl̩k]}} "wolf", {{lang|cs|krk}} {{IPA|[kr̩k]}} "neck". A particularly long word without vowels is {{lang|cs|čtvrthrst}}, meaning "quarter-handful", with two syllables (one for each R), or {{lang|cs|scvrnkls}}, a verb form meaning "you flipped (sth) down" (eg a marble). Whole sentences (usually tongue-twisters) can be made from such words, such as {{lang|cs|[[Strč prst skrz krk]]}}, meaning "stick a finger through your neck" ({{IPA|cs|str̩tʃ pr̩st skr̩s kr̩k|pron|Prst a krk.ogg}}), and {{langx|cs|Smrž pln skvrn zvlhl z mlh|label=none}}, which means "A morel full of spots wetted from fogs". (Here {{lang|cs|zvlhl}} has two syllables based on L; and the [[preposition]] {{lang|cs|z}} consists of a single consonant. Only prepositions do this in Czech, and they normally link phonetically to the following word, so not really behave as vowelless words.) In Russian, there are also prepositions that consist of a single consonant letter, like {{langx|ru|k|lit=to|label=none}}, {{langx|ru|v|lit=in|label=none}}, and {{langx|ru|s|lit=with|label=none}}. However, these forms are actually contractions of {{lang|ru|ko}}, {{lang|ru|vo}}, and {{lang|ru|so}} respectively, and these forms are still used in modern Russian before words with certain consonant clusters for ease of pronunciation. In [[Kazakh language|Kazakh]] and certain other [[Turkic languages]], words without vowel sounds may occur due to reduction of weak vowels. A common example is the Kazakh word for one: {{lang|kk|bir}}, pronounced {{IPA|[br]}}. Among careful speakers, however, the original vowel may be preserved, and the vowels are always preserved in the orthography. In Southern [[varieties of Chinese]], such as [[Cantonese]] and [[Southern Min|Minnan]], some monosyllabic words are made of exclusively [[nasal consonant|nasal]]s, such as Cantonese {{IPA|[m̩˨˩]}} "no" and {{IPA|[ŋ̩˩˧]}} "five". Minnan also has words consisting of a consonant followed by a syllabic nasal, such as ''pn̄g'' "cooked rice". So far, all of these syllabic consonants, at least in the [[lexical words]], have been [[sonorant]]s, such as {{IPA|[r]}}, {{IPA|[l]}}, {{IPA|[m]}}, and {{IPA|[n]}}, which have a [[voice (phonetics)|voiced]] quality similar to vowels. (They can carry tone, for example.) However, there are languages with lexical words that not only contain no vowels, but contain no sonorants at all, like (non-lexical) ''shh!'' in English. These include some [[Berber languages]], some languages of the American [[Pacific Northwest]], such as [[Nuxalk language|Nuxalk]], and some [[Northwest Caucasian languages]], such as [[Abaza language]]. An example from Nuxalk is {{lang|blc|scs}} "seal fat" (pronounced {{IPA|sal|sxs|}}, as spelled), and a longer one is ''[[wikt:xłp̓x̣ʷłtłpłłskʷc̓|clhp'xwlhtlhplhhskwts']]'' (pronounced {{IPA|sal|xɬpʼχʷɬtʰɬpʰɬːskʷʰt͡sʼ|}}) "he had had in his possession a bunchberry plant". (Follow the Nuxalk link for other examples.) Berber examples include {{IPA|/tkkststt/}} "you took it off" and {{IPA|/tfktstt/}} "you gave it". Some words may contain one or two consonants only: {{IPA|/ɡ/}} "be", {{IPA|/ks/}} "feed on".<ref>Audio recordings of selected words without vowels can be downloaded from {{cite web|url=http://ed268.univ-paris3.fr/lpp/pages/EQUIPE/ridouane/audio.doc |title=audio.doc |access-date=2009-06-19 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090320021843/http://ed268.univ-paris3.fr/lpp/pages/EQUIPE/ridouane/audio.doc |archive-date=2009-03-20 }}.</ref> Abaza language often drops word-final /ə/ when forming compounds, making combinations such as хъкӏхвбкъвылкӏ /qʰkʼχʷbqʷʼəlkʼ/ "five vats of sour cream" possible. Therefore, even though the dictionary forms хъкӏы /qʰkʼə/ "sour cream" and хвпа /χʷpʰa/ "five" have a [[Ə|schwa]] at the end, the consonant cluster /qʰkʼ/ and the sole consonant /χʷ/ (-pa is a [[Measure word|counting suffix]]) can be analysed as the full word, with final vowels probably being a result of obligatory [[Syllable#Nucleus|nucleus]] (such as in the first example, where the word бкъвыл /bqʷʼəl/ "vat" is a closed syllable, preventing the vowel deletion, unless /l/ is analysed as a [[syllabic consonant]], which would still make it a nucleus but would make the word vowelless). In [[Mandarin Chinese]], words and syllables such as {{lang|cmn|sī}} and {{lang|cmn|zhī}} are sometimes described as being syllabic fricatives and affricates phonemically, {{IPA|/ś/}} and {{IPA|/tʂ́/}}, but these do have a voiced segment that carries the tone. In the [[Japonic language]] [[Miyako language|Miyako]], there are words with no voiced sounds, such as {{lang|mvi|ss}} 'dust', {{lang|mvi|kss}} 'breast/milk', {{lang|mvi|pss}} 'day', {{lang|mvi|ff}} 'a comb', {{lang|mvi|kff}} 'to make', {{lang|mvi|fks}} 'to build', {{lang|mvi|ksks}} 'month', {{lang|mvi|sks}} 'to cut', {{lang|mvi|psks}} 'to pull'. Some analyses of [[Wandala language|Wandala]] is reported to have no phonemic vowels.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Wolff|first1=H. Ekkehard|title='Vocalogenesis' in (Central) Chadic languages|url=http://www.eva.mpg.de/fileadmin/content_files/linguistics/conferences/2015-diversity-linguistics/Wolff_slides.pdf|access-date=2 December 2017}}</ref>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Vowel
(section)
Add topic