Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages

This dissertation investigates the synchrony and diachrony of the vocalism of a variety of Northeast Asian languages, especially Korean, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages, which have traditionally been described as having developed from a palatal system. The dissertation rewrites the vocalic history...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ko, Seong
Other Authors: Whitman, John, Zec, Draga, Cohn, Abigail C
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1813/31234
_version_ 1821734166395355136
author Ko, Seong
author2 Whitman, John
Zec, Draga
Cohn, Abigail C
author_facet Ko, Seong
author_sort Ko, Seong
collection Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
description This dissertation investigates the synchrony and diachrony of the vocalism of a variety of Northeast Asian languages, especially Korean, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages, which have traditionally been described as having developed from a palatal system. The dissertation rewrites the vocalic history by demonstrating that the original vowel harmony in these languages was in fact based on an RTR, rather than a palatal, contrast, and provides a formal account for the development of individual vowel systems within the framework of Contrastive Hierarchy (Dresher, 2009). Following the general and theoretical background in Chapter 1, Chapter 2 begins to explore how the vowel contrasts in the modern Mongolic languages are hierarchically structured. It proceeds to propose an RTR analysis for Old Mongolian (contra Poppe, 1955) based on a combination of arguments from the comparative method, the typology of vowel shifts, and the phonetics of vowel features. Consequently, the palatal system in Kalmyk/Oirat is understood not as a retention but an innovation as a result of an RTR-to-palatal shift, contra Svantesson's (1985) palatal-to-RTR shift hypothesis. Chapter 3 presents an innovative view that Middle Korean had an RTR contrast-based vowel system and that various issues in Korean historical phonology receive better treatment under the contrastive hierarchy approach. Chapter 3 also argues that Ki-Moon Lee's (1964, 1972) Korean vowel shift hypothesis is untenable, based on the RTR analysis of Old Mongolian presented in Chapter 2. Chapter 4 shows that an RTR-based contrastive hierarchy analysis also holds for the lesser-studied Tungusic languages including Proto-Tungusic. Turning to theoretical issues, Chapter 5 investigates the minimal difference between Mongolic vs. Tungusic /i/ in terms of its transparency/opacity to labial harmony (van der Hulst & Smith, 1988). The contrastive hierarchy approaches to the Mongolic and Tungusic vowel systems in the previous chapters, coupled with a "fusional harmony" approach (Mester, ...
format Thesis
genre Tungusic languages
genre_facet Tungusic languages
id ftcornelluniv:oai:ecommons.cornell.edu:1813/31234
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftcornelluniv
op_relation bibid: 7959909
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/31234
publishDate 2012
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcornelluniv:oai:ecommons.cornell.edu:1813/31234 2025-01-17T01:12:52+00:00 Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages Ko, Seong Whitman, John Zec, Draga Cohn, Abigail C 2012-08-20 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1813/31234 en_US eng bibid: 7959909 https://hdl.handle.net/1813/31234 contrastive hierarchy tongue root harmony Tungusic Mongolic Korean vowel shift dissertation or thesis 2012 ftcornelluniv 2024-09-30T15:37:25Z This dissertation investigates the synchrony and diachrony of the vocalism of a variety of Northeast Asian languages, especially Korean, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages, which have traditionally been described as having developed from a palatal system. The dissertation rewrites the vocalic history by demonstrating that the original vowel harmony in these languages was in fact based on an RTR, rather than a palatal, contrast, and provides a formal account for the development of individual vowel systems within the framework of Contrastive Hierarchy (Dresher, 2009). Following the general and theoretical background in Chapter 1, Chapter 2 begins to explore how the vowel contrasts in the modern Mongolic languages are hierarchically structured. It proceeds to propose an RTR analysis for Old Mongolian (contra Poppe, 1955) based on a combination of arguments from the comparative method, the typology of vowel shifts, and the phonetics of vowel features. Consequently, the palatal system in Kalmyk/Oirat is understood not as a retention but an innovation as a result of an RTR-to-palatal shift, contra Svantesson's (1985) palatal-to-RTR shift hypothesis. Chapter 3 presents an innovative view that Middle Korean had an RTR contrast-based vowel system and that various issues in Korean historical phonology receive better treatment under the contrastive hierarchy approach. Chapter 3 also argues that Ki-Moon Lee's (1964, 1972) Korean vowel shift hypothesis is untenable, based on the RTR analysis of Old Mongolian presented in Chapter 2. Chapter 4 shows that an RTR-based contrastive hierarchy analysis also holds for the lesser-studied Tungusic languages including Proto-Tungusic. Turning to theoretical issues, Chapter 5 investigates the minimal difference between Mongolic vs. Tungusic /i/ in terms of its transparency/opacity to labial harmony (van der Hulst & Smith, 1988). The contrastive hierarchy approaches to the Mongolic and Tungusic vowel systems in the previous chapters, coupled with a "fusional harmony" approach (Mester, ... Thesis Tungusic languages Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
spellingShingle contrastive hierarchy
tongue root harmony
Tungusic
Mongolic
Korean
vowel shift
Ko, Seong
Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages
title Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages
title_full Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages
title_fullStr Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages
title_full_unstemmed Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages
title_short Tongue Root Harmony And Vowel Contrast In Northeast Asian Languages
title_sort tongue root harmony and vowel contrast in northeast asian languages
topic contrastive hierarchy
tongue root harmony
Tungusic
Mongolic
Korean
vowel shift
topic_facet contrastive hierarchy
tongue root harmony
Tungusic
Mongolic
Korean
vowel shift
url https://hdl.handle.net/1813/31234