Taos phonology


is a Tanoan language spoken by several hundred people in New Mexico, in the United States. The main description of its phonology was contributed by George L. Trager in a structuralist framework. Earlier considerations of the phonetics-phonology were by John P. Harrington and Jaime de Angulo. Trager's first account was in Trager based on fieldwork 1935-1937, which was then substantially revised in Trager . The description below takes Trager as the main point of departure and notes where this differs from the analysis of Trager. Harrington's description is more similar to Trager. Certain comments from a generative perspective are noted in a comparative work Hale.

Segments

The two following sections detail phonetic information about Taos phonological segments, as well as their phonological patterning in morphophonemic alternations.

Consonants

lists 27 consonants for Taos, although in his later analysis he posited 18 consonants.
Words exemplifying Taos consonants are in the table below:

Consonant phonetics and allophony

The stem-initial consonant in many verb stems has alternates between two different forms in what Trager calls the "basic" stem and the "stative" stem. The "basic" stem is used for the preterit active verb form while the "stative" stem is used for the resultative stative verb-forms and deverbal nouns.
A different set of alternations are what Trager calls "internal" ablaut. The last consonant of the verb stem alternates between two different consonants in the basic stem form and the negative stem form.

Vowels

Monophthongs

Taos has six vowels with three contrastive vowel heights and two degrees of vowel backness.
Five of the vowels have an oral-nasal contrast, which persists even before a nasal consonant coda. For example, the Taos has a syllable before as well as syllable before as in the words and .
Morphemes exemplifying Taos monophthongs are in the table below:
Monophthong phonetics and allophony
The allophonic variation of the vowels detailed above are summarized in the following chart:
In addition to these monophthongs, Taos has five vowel clusters that can function as syllable nuclei and are approximately the same duration as the single vowels:
Unlike diphthongs in several other languages, each component of the vowel cluster has an equal prominence and duration. The cluster is rare in general; the clusters are uncommon in unstressed syllables. Additionally, the vowel cluster
is found in less-assimilated Spanish loanwords. Examples of the clusters are below:
The phonetics of the vowel clusters vary in their length and also their quality according to stress, tone, and position syllable structure. The clusters have vowel components of equal length in stressed closed syllables with mid tone. However, in unstressed syllables and in low-toned syllables the first vowel in the cluster is more prominent; in high-toned syllables and in open syllables with primary stress and mid tone, the second vowel is more prominent. The nasal cluster has equally prominent vowels in primary-stressed mid-toned syllables while in closed syllables and unstressed the second vowel is extremely short. The cluster always has the first element more prominent than the second vowel.
For the quality differences, the vowel in cluster is raised toward. When short, the vowel in cluster is raised toward. The vowel in cluster is rounded to and is more rounded than the allophone of monophthong adjacent to labials. These allophones are summarized in the table below:
The monophthongs can be followed by high front and high back offglides, but these are analyzed as glide consonants in a coda position. Trager notes that in these sequences the glides are not as prominent as the vowel nuclei but that the difference is not very marked, and, in fact, Harrington describes these as diphthongs on par with Trager's "vowel clusters". The following vowel + glide sequences are reported in Trager :

Reduplicative patterning

s that end in a vowel have a suffixation-reduplication process in absolute forms that attaches a glottal stop and a reduplicant consisting of a reduplicated stem-final vowel to the noun stem :
If the stem-final vowel is an oral vowel, the reduplicated vowel is exactly the same as the stem vowel:
However, if the stem-final vowel is nasal, the nasality is not copied in the reduplicant — that is, the nasal vowel will be reduplicated as that vowel's oral counterpart:
In stems that end in a vowel cluster, only the second vowel of the cluster is reduplicated:
And a nasal cluster has a reduplicated and denasalized second vowel:

Vowel deletion

Taos shares with other languages in the region an areal feature of vowel elision at the end of words. When a word ends in a final vowel, the vowel may be deleted resulting in a consonant final word. This is especially common with final and occasionally with final. The elision is also very common when the final is preceded by a sonorant consonant such as, etc.
For example, the 3rd person pronoun particle
is often phonetically
with syllable reduction and a resulting closed syllable. Other examples include
In the words, the voiced stops become phonetically voiceless, unreleased, and have long durations when word-final in addition to the loss of the final vowel.
Vowel elision is common in connected speech. Trager notes that the elision may affect stress patterns but that this requires further research. Trager states that the deletion of final after a sonorant and the retention of is in free variation but may be related to speaking speed and syntax although the details are still unknown.

Prosody

Stress

Trager analyzes Taos as having three degrees of stress:
Trager describes Taos stress in terms of loudness; however, he also notes in several places where stress has effects on vowel length and vowel quality.
All words must have a single primary stress. Polysyllabic words can, in addition to the syllable with primary stress, have syllables with secondary stress, unstressed syllables, or a combination of both unstressed and secondarily-stressed syllables.
Trager states that the primary and secondary stress levels are in complementary distribution in low-toned and high-toned syllables. However, his later analysis rejects this.
When two morphemes both with a primary stress in each morpheme are concatenated together, the first primary stress in the leftmost morpheme becomes a secondary stress.

Tone

Taos has three tones:
The tonal system is however marginal. Trager describes the tones as being distinguished by pitch differences. The mid tone is by the most commonly occurring tone; high tone is limited to a few stems and suffixes; the low tone is relatively common in stem syllables. The high tone is described as "higher and sharper" than the mid tone while the low tone is "distinctly lower and drawling". Many words are distinguished solely by tonal differences as in the following minimal pairs which demonstrate the contrast between the mid tone and the low tone in stressed syllables:
There is no tonal contrast in unstressed syllables, which have only phonetic mid tones. Thus, the word has the unstressed syllables and which have phonetic mid tones resulting in a phonetic form of.
Trager initially found the stress level to be predictable in syllables with high and low tones; however, Trager finds this to be in error with the addition of newly collected data and a different theoretical outlook.
In his final historical notes, Trager suggests that in proto-Taos there may originally have been only a stress system and a contrast of vowel length which later developed into the present tonal-stress system and lost the vowel length contrasts.

Syllables and phonotactics

The simplest syllable in Taos consists of a single consonant in the onset followed by a single vowel nucleus, i.e. a CV syllable. An onset and nucleus are obligatory in every syllable. Complex onsets consisting of a two-consonant cluster are found only in loanwords borrowed from New Mexican Spanish. The nucleus can have optionally two vowels in vowel clusters. The syllable coda is optional and can consist of up to two consonants. In other words, the following are possible syllable types in Taos: CV, CVV, CVC, CVVC, CVCC. This can be succinctly represented in the following :
Additionally, every syllable has a tone associated with it. The number of possible syllables occurring in Taos is greatly limited by a number of phonotactic constraints.
A further point concerns Trager's analysis of Taos coda syllables: CC clusters occurring in codas are only possible as a result of vowel elision, which is often apocope. For example, has a CV.CVC.CV syllable structure, but after the elision of the final the resulting has a CV.CVCC structure with a CC cluster in the coda of the last syllable.

Onsets

A single onset C1 can be filled by any Taos consonant — that is, are possible onsets. The onset, and the onsets word-initially, are only found in Spanish borrowings. In a loanword two-consonant C1C<2 cluster, C can be filled only by voiceless stops while C2 can be filled only by in the following combinations:
Of the onsets, can only occur as onsets.

Rimes

Within the syllable rime, any single Taos vowel — — may occur in the nucleus. In complex nuclei consisting of vowel clusters, the following combinations are possible:
The cluster was found only in a single word .
A subset of Taos consonants consisting of voiced stops and sonorants — — can occur in coda C4 position. There is a restriction that high vowels cannot be followed by a homorganic glide. Not all VC combinations are attested. The attested sequences of V + glide are listed in the [|vowel diphthong section] above. Additionally, may appear in coda position in loanwords.
In complex two-consonant C3C4 codas, Trager states that the final consonant C4 can consist of a voiced stop and be preceded by a consonant C3 consisting of a non-liquid sonorant. However, Trager states that the following are the only attested coda clusters:
Trager does not discuss the combinatory possibilities between segments and tones, although he does for stress and tone.

Loanword phonology

indicates the type of phonetic/phonological changes that New Mexican Spanish loanwords undergo when being adapted to the Taos language. Different degrees of nativization occur in Spanish loanwords: earlier borrowings have greater differences while later borrowings have much greater similarity with the Spanish forms. The chart below lists some of the correspondences. The inflected nouns in the table are in the absolute singular form with the inflectional suffix and any reduplicant separated from the initial noun stem with hyphens.
Although NM Spanish is usually borrowed as Taos, it is nativized as when it precedes the Taos glide, which is the nativization of NM Spanish in the cluster . Because Taos when followed by is typically raised, Taos is phonetically a closer match to NM Spanish low. Thus, NM Spanish compadre is borrowed as .
Taos is a better match than for NM Spanish because Taos is restricted to affixes in native Taos words.
Another common process is the insertion of after in New Mexican Spanish words ending in, as native words in Taos cannot have syllables ending in.
The other NM Spanish phonemes are nativized as similar phonemes in Taos:
NM Spanish > Taos,
NM Spanish > Taos,
NM Spanish > Taos ,
NM Spanish > Taos,
NM Spanish > Taos,
NM Spanish > Taos,
NM Spanish > Taos,
NM Spanish > Taos.
Later borrowing, which has been subject to less alteration, has led to the development of, word‑initial voiced stops, syllable‑final, and consonants clusters. The word‑internal cluster is reduced to in Taos, as in NM Spanish > Taos — the cluster was reduced further to just as in one speaker, a reflection of the older pattern where cannot be syllable‑final.