Vowel harmony in Oroqen (Tungus)

Oroqen is an endangered language of the Manchu-Tungus group spoken in China with 2,240 speakers in 1987. It exhibits an RTR harmony and a round harmony (RH). RTR harmony in Oroqen is similar to that found in the related Tungus languages (Ard 1981; Van der Hulst & Smith 1988) and provides support...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zhang, Xi
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Department of Linguistics, University of Toronto 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://twpl.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/twpl/article/view/6323
Description
Summary:Oroqen is an endangered language of the Manchu-Tungus group spoken in China with 2,240 speakers in 1987. It exhibits an RTR harmony and a round harmony (RH). RTR harmony in Oroqen is similar to that found in the related Tungus languages (Ard 1981; Van der Hulst & Smith 1988) and provides support for Ard's proposal that the original harmony patters in Proto-Tungus was based on the position of the tongue root. RH in Oroqen has some special characteristics. The trigger and target vowels for RH are both low. Within a morpheme, RH has to have a minimally bimoraic domain. Between morphemes, RH has an unrestricted domain when the conditions are met. The traits of RH process in Oroqen have not been reported in other Tungus languages in Russia, but have been found in Ewenki, another Tungus language in China. The complexities of RH in Oroqen are worthy of further attention, both within the language itself and comparatively.