West Frisian phonology


This article is about the phonology and phonetics of the West Frisian language.

Consonants

has two allophones: an approximant, which appears word-initially, and a fricative, which occurs elsewhere.
The distinction between and is very marginal, and the two are generally considered allophones of a single phoneme. The plosive generally appears at the beginning of a word and at the beginning of a stressed syllable, while the fricative occurs elsewhere. However, there are some cases that disturb this distribution, showing that the allophony is not purely due to stress but also has a morphological factor:
Thus, it appears that the underlying representation of words includes the plosive-fricative distinction. In single-morpheme words, this representation follows the above rule of allophony, but in words with multiple morphemes the underlying status must be known in order to recover the correct pronunciation.
Schwa is often dropped in the combination, turning the into a syllabic sonorant. The specific sonorant that arises depends on the preceding consonant so that it is labial when preceded by labial, alveolar when preceded by labiodental or alveolar and velar when preceded by velar.
Schwa is also commonly dropped in and, creating the syllabic sonorants and, respectively. There are also some other cases.
The sequences coalesce to.

Final devoicing

West Frisian has final obstruent devoicing, meaning that voiced obstruents are merged with the voiceless ones at the end of a word. Thus, word-final are merged into voiceless, although final is rare. The spelling reflects this in the case of the fricatives, but not in the case of the plosives, which remain spelled with and.

Vowels

The vowel inventory of West Frisian is very rich.

Monophthongs

Frisian is traditionally analysed as having both falling and rising diphthongs. argues that the rising diphthongs are in fact glide-vowel sequences, not real diphthongs. This view is supported by who transcribe them with consonant symbols, which is the convention used in this article.
Frisian also possesses sequences of a long vowel followed by a glide. According to Booij, the glide behaves as a consonant in these sequences, because it is shifted entirely to the next syllable when a following vowel is added. Visser also includes sequences of a high vowel plus glide among these. Such sequences are transcribed with a consonant symbol in this article, e.g.
Some falling diphthongs alternate with the rising ones: