Catalan phonology


The phonology of Catalan, a Romance language, has a certain degree of dialectal variation. Although there are two standard dialects, one based on Eastern Catalan and one based on Valencian, this article deals with features of all or most dialects, as well as regional pronunciation differences. Various studies have focused on different Catalan varieties; for example, and analyze Central Eastern varieties, the former focusing on the educated speech of Barcelona and the latter focusing more on the vernacular of Barcelona, and does a careful phonetic study of Central Eastern Catalan.
Catalan is characterized by final-obstruent devoicing, lenition, and voicing assimilation; a set of 7 or 8 phonemic vowels, vowel assimilations, many phonetic diphthongs, and vowel reduction, whose precise details differ between dialects. Several dialects have a dark l, and all dialects have palatal l and n.

Consonants

Phonetic notes:
Voiced obstruents undergo final-obstruent devoicing so that fred is pronounced with, while fredes is pronounced with.

Stops

Voiced stops become lenited to approximants in syllable onsets, after continuants: →, →, →. Exceptions include after lateral consonants and after, e.g. ull de bou , bolígraf boníssim . Additionally, remains unlenited in non-betacist dialects. In the coda position, these sounds are always realized as stops except in many Valencian dialects, where they are lenited.
In some Valencian dialects final can be lenited before a vowel: tot açò .
In some dialects initial can be lenited: gata .
In many Catalan dialects, and may be geminated in certain environments.
In Majorcan varieties, and become and word-finally and before front vowels, in some of these dialects, this has extended to all environments except before liquids and back vowels; e.g. sang .

Affricates

The phonemic status of affricates is dubious; after other consonants, affricates are in free variation with fricatives, e.g. clenxa and may be analyzed as either single phonemes or clusters of a stop and a fricative.
There is dialectal variation in regards to affricate length, with long affricates occurring in both Eastern and Western dialects such as in Majorca and few areas in Southern Valencia. Also, intervocalic affricates are predominantly long, especially those that are voiced or occurring immediately after a stressed syllable . In modern Valencian and have merged into.

Fricatives

occurs in Balearic, as well as in Alguerese, standard Valencian and some areas in southern Catalonia. Everywhere else, it has merged with historic so that and occur in complementary distribution. In Majorcan, and are in complementary distribution, with occurring before vowels. In other varieties that have both sounds, they are in contrast before vowels, with neutralization in favor of before consonants.
In some Valencian dialects, and are auditorily similar such that neutralization may occur in the future. That is the case of Northern Valencian where is depalatalized to as in caixa. Central Valencian words like mig and lleig have been transcribed with rather than the expected, and Southern Valencian "has been reported to undergo depalatalization without merging with ". as in passets versus passeig
In Aragon and Central Valencian, voiced fricatives and affricates are missing and has merged with the set.

Sonorants

While "dark l",, may be a positional allophone of in most dialects, is dark irrespective of position in Eastern dialects like Majorcan and standard Eastern Catalan.
The distribution of the two rhotics and closely parallels that of Spanish. Between vowels, the two contrast 'myrrh' vs. mira , but they are otherwise in complementary distribution. appears in the onset, except in word-initial position, after,, and , and in compounds, where is used. Different dialects vary in regards to rhotics in the coda, with Western Catalan generally featuring and Central Catalan dialects like those of Barcelona or Girona featuring a weakly trilled unless it precedes a vowel-initial word in the same prosodic unit, in which case appears. There is free variation in "r" word-initially, after,, and, and in compounds, wherein is pronounced or, the latter being similar to English red: ruc, honra , Israel .
In careful speech,,, and may be geminated 'unnecessary'; emmagatzemar . A geminated may also occur . analyzes intervocalic as the result of gemination of a single rhotic phoneme: serra 'saw, mountains'.

Vowels

Phonetic notes:
Most varieties of Catalan contrast seven stressed vowel phonemes. However, some Balearic dialects have an additional stressed vowel phoneme ; e.g. sec . The stressed schwa of these dialects corresponds to in Central Catalan and in Western Catalan varieties.
Contrasting series of the main Catalan dialects:
Vowelwordgloss
sic'sic'
séc'fold'
sec'dry'
'I sit'
sac'bag'
sóc'I am'
soc'clog'
suc'juice'

Vowelwordgloss
sic'sic'
séc'fold'
sec'I sit'
sec'dry'
sac'bag'
sóc'I am'
soc'clog'
suc'juice'

Vowelwordgloss
sic'sic'
séc'fold'
sec'dry'
'I sit'
sac'bag'
soc'clog'
suc
sóc
'juice', 'I am'

Vowelwordgloss
sic'sic'
séc
sec
'fold'
'dry, I sit'
set'seven'
sac'bag'
sóc'I am'
soc'clog'
suc'juice'

Unstressed vowels

In Eastern Catalan, vowels in unstressed position reduce to three :,, ;,, ; remains unchanged. However there are some dialectal differences: Alguerese merges,, and with ; and in most areas of Majorca, can appear in unstressed position.
In Western Catalan, vowels in unstressed position reduce to five:, ;, ; remain unchanged. However, in some Western dialects reduced vowels tend to merge into different realizations in some cases:
VowelExampleGloss
si'if'
se'itself'
sa'her'
-nos'us'
uns'some'

VowelExamplegloss
si'if'
se'itself'
sa'her'
-nos'us'
uns'some'

VowelExampleGloss
si'if'
se'itself'
sa'her'
-nos'us'
uns'some'

Diphthongs and triphthongs

There are also a number of phonetic diphthongs and triphthongs, all of which begin and/or end in or.
In standard Eastern Catalan, rising diphthongs are only possible in the following contexts:
There are certain instances of compensatory diphthongization in Majorcan so that troncs develops a compensating palatal glide and surfaces as . Diphthongization compensates for the loss of the palatal stop. There are other cases where diphthongization compensates for the loss of point of articulation features as in vs. .
The dialectal distribution of compensatory diphthongization is almost entirely dependent on the dorsal stop and the extent of consonant assimilation.
Voiced affricates are devoiced after stressed vowels in dialects like Eastern Catalan where there may be a correlation between devoicing and lengthening of voiced affricates: metge → . In Barcelona, voiced stops may be fortified.

Assimilations

Catalan denti-alveolar stops can fully assimilate to the following consonant, producing gemination; this is particularly evident before nasal and lateral consonants: e.g. cotna, motlle/motle, and setmana. Learned words can alternate between featuring and not featuring such assimilation.
Central Valencian features simple elision in many of these cases though learned words don't exhibit either assimilation or elision: atles and administrar.

Prosody

Stress

Stress most often occurs on any of the last three syllables of a word 'compass', càstig 'punishment', pallús .
Compound words and adverbs formed with may have a syllable with secondary stress 'willingly'; parallamps but every lexical word has just one syllable with main stress.

Phonotactics

Any consonant, as well as and may be an onset. Clusters may consist of a consonant plus a semivowel or an obstruent plus a liquid. Some speakers may have one of these obstruent-plus-liquid clusters preceding a semivowel, e.g. síndria ; for other speakers, this is pronounced .
Word-medial codas are restricted to one consonant + ). In the coda position, voice contrasts among obstruents are neutralized. Although there are exceptions, syllable-final rhotics are often lost before a word boundary or before the plural morpheme of most words: color vs. coloraina .
In Central Eastern Catalan, obstruents fail to surface word-finally when preceded by a homorganic consonant. Complex codas simplify only if the loss of the segment doesn't result in the loss of place specification.
When the suffix -erol is added to camp it makes, indicating that the underlying representation is , however when the copula is added it makes. The resulting generalization is that this underlying will only surface in a morphologically complex word. Despite this, word-final codas are not usually simplified in most of Balearic and Valencian.
Word-initial clusters from Graeco-Latin learned words tend to drop the first phoneme: pneumàtic , pseudònim , pterodàctil , gnom .
Word-final obstruents are devoiced; however, they assimilate voicing of the following consonant, e.g. cuc de seda . In regular and fast speech, stops often assimilate the place of articulation of the following consonant producing phonetic gemination: tot bé .
Word-final fricatives are voiced before a following vowel; e.g. bus enorme .
In Majorcan and Minorcan Catalan, undergoes total assimilation to a following consonant : buf gros .

Dialectal variation

The differences in the vocalic systems outlined above are the main criteria used to differentiate between the major dialects:
distinguishes two major dialect groups, western and eastern dialects; the latter of which only allow,, and to appear in unstressed syllables and include Northern Catalan, Central Catalan, Balearic, and Alguerese. Western dialects, which allow any vowel in unstressed syllables, include Valencian and North-Western Catalan.
Regarding consonants, betacism and fricative–affricate alternations are the most prominent differences between dialects.
Other dialectal features are:
Catalan shares features with neighboring Romance languages.
In contrast with other Romance languages, Catalan has many monosyllabic words; and those ending in a wide variety of consonants and some consonant clusters. Also, Catalan has final obstruent devoicing, thus featuring many couplets like amic vs. amiga.

Phonological sample