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Latest comment: 16 years ago6 comments2 people in discussion
I'm thinking of changing the page to go with the earlier 1946 analysis and footnote the 1948 analysis. It would make it easier to compare Taos with Kiowa and other Tanoan languages. Plus it makes the syllable structure a little cleaner. – ishwar(speak)05:03, 27 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
I'm just thinking that if we're going to use the 1946 analysis, we don't really need another table. The differences can be summarized in one or two sentences. Something like "in Trager (1948), aspirated, ejective, and labialized consonants are analyzed as clusters with /h/, /ʔ/ and /w/ respectively rather than single phonemes." — Ƶ§œš¹[aɪm ˈfɻɛ̃ⁿdˡi]00:44, 28 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
I agree. In my opinion, the best grammatical descriptions are those that are richly exemplified (even better, over-exemplified). Unfortunately, that is not how Trager's grammatical description is. In his 1946 sketch, he has a list of words at the end as a sampling of the lexicon. One would have to search through his publications in order to get the examples. Harrington has more examples, but he has a different transcription system and some of his transcriptions do not seem to have a one-to-one correspondence to Trager, so they would have to be left as "is" in his notation (converting H's phonetics to T's phonemics would require interpretation, which is original research).
Anyway, I can do this after some of other stuff is completed. The tone/stress stuff is a bit annoying to read.... (it really calls out for more research.) – ishwar(speak)21:10, 28 February 2008 (UTC)Reply