Jump to content

Talk:Japanese phonology: Difference between revisions

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit
m Archiving 3 discussion(s) to Talk:Japanese phonology/Archive 2) (bot
 
(89 intermediate revisions by 24 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{WikiProject banner shell|class=Start|1=
{{WikiProjectBannerShell|1=
{{WikiProject Languages|class=start}}
{{WikiProject Languages}}
{{WikiProject Linguistics|phonetics=yes|class=start}}
{{WikiProject Linguistics|phonetics=yes}}
{{WPJAPAN|class=start|importance=mid}}
{{WikiProject Japan|importance=mid}}
}}
}}
{{User:MiszaBot/config
{{User:MiszaBot/config
Line 14: Line 14:
{{archives|search=yes|bot=MiszaBot I|age=180}}
{{archives|search=yes|bot=MiszaBot I|age=180}}


== Devoicing: kishitsu? ==
== Moraic consonants ==


@[[User:Fdom5997|Fdom5997]], could you clarify what useful information you think I removed in [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Japanese_phonology&diff=prev&oldid=1231553374 this diff]? Since it involved adding separate sections for the moraic nasal and moraic obstruent, some information relevant to only one of these was put in the appropriate section. For example, I did not remove the examples [sanneɴ] 三年, sannen, 'three years' and 三枚, sanmai, 'three sheets' from the article: they remained in the appropriate section for the moraic nasal, along with new examples I added for this sound before other consonants.
I'm a native Japanese speaker and I've never pronounced 気質 ''kishitsu'' with the first i devoiced like in the example [kʲ'''i̥'''ɕitsɯᵝ]. It's either [kʲiɕi̥tsɯᵝ] or [kʲi̥ɕi̥tsɯᵝ]. Is the opposite (as listed in the article) true for the majority of Japanese speakers, or is my pronunciation the more standard one? <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/122.213.236.124|122.213.236.124]] ([[User talk:122.213.236.124#top|talk]]) 11:35, 6 October 2016 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:I think [kʲi̥ɕitsɯ] is more common, and you may be mistaking the palatalization in the first mora for voicing. Remember devoiced doesn't necessarily mean silent, it just means no vibration of the vocal cords. Since {{IPAblink|k}} is a stop and {{IPAblink|ɕ}} is a fricative, the transition between them (i.e. devoiced [i]) may sound just like {{IPAblink|ç}}, which may trick one into thinking an actual vocoid is produced.
:[kʲiɕi̥tsɯ], on the other hand, would render it indistinguishable from 既出 ''kishutsu''. Although [kʲiɕɯ̥tsɯ] may still differ from [kʲiɕi̥tsɯ] in the lip shape, and, being a less common word, it may more often be enunciated as [kʲi̥ɕɯtsɯ]⁓[kʲiɕɯtsɯ], paralleling [kʲi̥ɕitsɯ], if you actually pronounce ''kishitsu'' as [kʲiɕi̥tsɯ], it should sound intermediate between ''kishitsu'' and ''kishutsu''. [[User:Nardog|Nardog]] ([[User talk:Nardog|talk]]) 14:43, 9 May 2018 (UTC)


When you partially reverted me, you re-added these examples under the section for the moraic obstruent, as well as re-adding the examples [sat̚.tɕi] 察知, satchi, 'inference' and 一歳, issai, 'one year old. So all of those are now listed twice in the article: do you feel that is really necessary? I did remove the phonemic transcriptions from the table, but they remain in the article in the paragraph following the table. You also duplicated the sentence "The phonemic analysis of moraic consonants is disputed."
== "Archiphoneme" status of /N/ and /Q/ ==


I did remove one of the old examples, [ip̚.pai] 一杯, ippai, 'one cupful', because the analysis of geminate [pp] is a bit more complicated (as it has limited contrast with singleton [h], some more abstract analyses treat them as somehow belonging to the same phoneme) and it seemed more straightforward and therefore better to use [aka] 垢, aka, 'dirt' and [ak̚ka] 悪化, akka, 'worsening', a minimal pair supplied by Vance, as an example of a geminate plosive. [[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 03:29, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
As far as I know, /N/ and /Q/ are not archiphonemes. I'm pretty sure that whoever said they are doesn't understand what an archiphoneme is, this has confused like 5 people I know just because of this one page. To my knowledge, an archiphoneme involves the neutralization of phonemes - it's only relevant in cases when separate phonemes don't contrast in a specific position. "This can be seen as an archiphoneme in that it has no underlying place or manner of articulation, and instead manifests as several phonetic realizations depending on context" sounds incredibly wrong to me, and I think the editor got confused by the "limp, lint, link" example on the archiphoneme page, but that's completely different from what occurs with the moraic nasal. [[Special:Contributions/2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2048:379A:7CE7:F522|2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2048:379A:7CE7:F522]] ([[User talk:2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2048:379A:7CE7:F522|talk]]) 02:56, 30 March 2020 (UTC)
:Can you elaborate? Since Japanese already has /m/ and /n/ (and /ŋ/ according to some analyses) in syllable-initial positions, the syllable-final (moraic) nasal is exactly a case "when separate phonemes don't contrast in a specific position" much like the "limp, lint, link" example in English. The gemination is also such a case in that, again because of the limited distribution of phonemes in syllable-final positions, out of e.g. /p, t, k/, only /t/ can occur in e.g. /ka_ta/ (*/kapta/, */kakta/).
:I don't necessarily question the truth of what you say given it is indeed the case that literature doesn't usually refer to the "special moras" as archiphonemes (just that the ''notation'' using capital letters is "archiphonemic representation", e.g. [https://books.google.com/books?id=8vFeCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA34 Kubozono 2015:34]). I'm just wondering why it's so and how the article can be improved accrodingly. [[User:Nardog|Nardog]] ([[User talk:Nardog|talk]]) 05:25, 7 April 2020 (UTC)


:Well, if you simply simplified it, then there should not be anything wrong there. But I think you should stop removing information that is already there. If you are going to add info, then go ahead. But you shouldn’t need to keep removing information here. [[User:Fdom5997|Fdom5997]] ([[User talk:Fdom5997|talk]]) 03:35, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, the notation is the same, and I imagine that had also been a source of confusion, but it is indeed the case that /N/ is analyzed as a single phoneme, not an example of neutralization. I'm not an expert on any of this, just applying what I know from reading, but I can offer my understanding of the difference between the English example and what occurs in Japanese. In English, /m/, /n/, and /ŋ/ regularly can and do occupy the coda alone, while only certain corresponding phonetic realizations can occur before certain consonants, something analyzed as a neutralization of phonemes. There's only one nasal phoneme available to fill the coda in Japanese, though, which doesn't even behave in a way that can be easily compared with one of /m/ or /n/. In a vacuum, the /N/ of /saN/, for instance, does not behave phonetically in a way which associates it with either of the two nasal phonemes that can appear in the onset. Just because /N/ surfaces as [m] or [n] in certain contexts does not mean that a distinction is being neutralized, because no distinction was available there in the first place. You can apply the same to /Q/ - there's no distinction to neutralize here either. [[Special:Contributions/2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2517:CEC4:FBD3:9C18|2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2517:CEC4:FBD3:9C18]] ([[User talk:2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2517:CEC4:FBD3:9C18|talk]]) 02:20, 9 April 2020 (UTC)
::I apologize for how these big edits can make it difficult to tell whether information was removed or just rearranged. My goal wasn't to remove information, just to rearrange it into a format that I thought might be more readable. I will make another edit and only remove the portions of the article that I think are currently duplicated (so there should be no loss of information): look it over and see if you agree.--[[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 03:39, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
:That's a bit circular, don't you think? /Phonemes/ are deduced from [phones], not the other way around. {{tq|Just because /N/ surfaces as [m] or [n] in certain contexts does not mean that a distinction is being neutralized, because no distinction was available there in the first place.}} Well, there being no distinction available in certain contexts sure does sound like a case of neutralization. Otherwise, why is /N/ analyzed as a single phoneme in the first place then? In fact, linguists used to analyze the moraic nasal as allophones of /n/, and some still do (e.g. Kubozono). It's not that there is no neutralization because only /N, Q/ can occur in a coda, but that scholars felt necessity to posit /N, Q/ as separate phonemes precisely because there is neutralization. Anyway, [http://user.keio.ac.jp/~kawahara/pdf/LabruneReplyPublished.pdf here]'s an example of referring to /Q/ as an "archiphoneme". I think the article is correct after all. [[User:Nardog|Nardog]] ([[User talk:Nardog|talk]]) 07:05, 9 April 2020 (UTC)


== Juhhari ==
The point is that there is not a distinction "in certain contexts", there is no distinction in ''any context''. What do you mean by "scholars felt necessity to posit /N, Q/ as separate phonemes precisely because there is neutralization"? How would neutralization prove their phonemicity? Neutralization is the ''dissolution'' of phonemic distinction, not the creation of new phonemes, it's shorthand for "one of several phonemes which are not distinct in this position".
And even if you analyze /N/ as just /n/, which I do not believe is the prevailing view, that still doesn't make an archiphoneme? What distinction is supposed to be neutralized here? [[Special:Contributions/2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2517:CEC4:FBD3:9C18|2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2517:CEC4:FBD3:9C18]] ([[User talk:2601:4C4:C205:3C90:2517:CEC4:FBD3:9C18|talk]]) 09:06, 9 April 2020 (UTC)
:If /N, Q/ are not {{tq|shorthand for "one of several phonemes which are not distinct in this position"}}, what are they? Why were they conceived of in the first place, if not for the convenience of having a shorthand for a nasal or obstruent with no defined place of articulation? {{tq|What distinction is supposed to be neutralized here?}} Between /m/ and /n/, before /p, b, m/ and /t, d, n, r/ respectively, of course. Sure, coda nasals occur in other environments too, but they can just as (or slightly less) plausibly be analyzed as allophones of /m/ or /n/. /N/ is only posited out of analytical convenience/economy, not observable fact. So /Q/ is an even better example of an archiphoneme, in that all its realizations are shared by other phonemes. It can be disposed of and it'll be perfectly fine; now you only have to write /tt/ instead of /Qt/ and so on. [[User:Nardog|Nardog]] ([[User talk:Nardog|talk]]) 10:35, 9 April 2020 (UTC)


The sokuonbin (sandhi gemination) of 十 ''jū'' as /(d)ʑuQ/ as in ''juhhari'' is proscribed on the basis that /uː/ does not become /uQ/ in other words, and /(d)ʑiQ/ is the prescribed form, but AFAIK nobody says ''jihhari'' aside from trained professionals. [[User:Nardog|Nardog]] ([[User talk:Nardog|talk]]) 19:51, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
I don't personally get that analysis (why should a phoneme require a primary place or even manner of articulation?), but that's obviously irrelevant. Upon rather cursory research and a couple of inquiries to people who have read more than me... It is, indeed, a stance that is taken by ''some'' linguists, but I'm pretty sure it requires a different definition of archiphoneme (an archiphoneme isn't a phoneme at all under typical usage, which appears to be backed up by Wikipedia's own section on it). In any case, it is not ''definitionally'' true that /N/ and /Q/ are archiphonemes, as you seem to be asserting. That is just one analysis with one set of definitions, which, as far as I can tell, is not a matter of consensus at all. The majority of authors don't refer to the special moras as archiphonemes at all, and all those I could find that do offer no real explanation. In my opinion that is clearly not reason to leave the article as-is on the subject, but instead reason to elaborate on the differing stances in the literature after further research. Can sources that actually explain be found? Can the article be edited to reflect different common analyses? [[Special:Contributions/2601:4C4:C205:3C90:9CC0:FA6B:B9CA:B21D|2601:4C4:C205:3C90:9CC0:FA6B:B9CA:B21D]] ([[User talk:2601:4C4:C205:3C90:9CC0:FA6B:B9CA:B21D|talk]]) 11:46, 9 April 2020 (UTC)
:Thanks for clarifying. After I edited that citation, I did a web search and saw a bit more about the pronunciation of 十 as /(d)ʑuQ/, e.g. 二十歳 (mentioned on [https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/二十歳 Wiktionary]). Other websites that mention it are [https://ja.hinative.com/questions/20387306 HiNative], [https://www.reddit.com/r/LearnJapanese/comments/cikvx3/difference%20between%20じゅっさい%20and%20じっさい/ Reddit], this [https://serai.jp/hobby/1084829 website]. It sounds like some dictionaries recognize it now, but I haven't had time to find a citation covering that topic yet. In any case, I think it's clear that ''juhhari'' is genuinely the form that is being mentioned in the context of this discussion. Does jihhari exist even as a prescribed form, or would the prescribed form be ''jūhari''? That's what [https://jisho.org/sentences/51867389d5dda7e98101514b jisho gives in its entry for the sentence "今日の一針、明日の十針。"] (It cites Tatoeba, but confusingly, [https://tatoeba.org/en/sentences/show/171971 on that site] the pronunciation of 十針 is shown as ''tohari''.)--[[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 20:58, 6 August 2024 (UTC)
::''jihhari'' is the prescribed form AFAIU. That sentence is a fixed phrase and 十針 is read as ''tohari'' [https://kotobank.jp/word/%E4%BB%8A%E6%97%A5%E3%81%AE%E4%B8%80%E9%87%9D%E6%98%8E%E6%97%A5%E3%81%AE%E5%8D%81%E9%87%9D-1739386 apparently]. [[User:Nardog|Nardog]] ([[User talk:Nardog|talk]]) 21:07, 6 August 2024 (UTC)


== Pitch accent clarification ==
Also, a clarification to address an issue with your recent edit: the point of what I said previously is that not everyone treats /N/ as an archiphoneme, even when it is analyzed as just that - /N/. /N/ as /N/ does not necessarily mean /N/ is being called an archiphoneme - your assertion was false not because there are other analyses, but because the very same analysis does not require the label of archiphoneme. In fact, under the typical definition of "archiphoneme", the analysis of the moraic nasal as one would instead require that it could be both /m/ and /n/, it is just that some authors use a separate definition of archiphoneme that allows it to be a phoneme in its own right. [[Special:Contributions/2601:4C4:C205:3C90:F4C7:BFD9:504D:297E|2601:4C4:C205:3C90:F4C7:BFD9:504D:297E]] ([[User talk:2601:4C4:C205:3C90:F4C7:BFD9:504D:297E|talk]]) 01:48, 10 April 2020 (UTC)


<blockquote>"An initial unaccented mora isn't always pronounced with low pitch when it occurs as part of a heavy syllable. Specifically, when the second mora of an accent phrase is /R/ (the latter part of a long vowel) or /N/ (the moraic nasal), the first two moras are optionally either LH (low-high) or HH (high-high). In contrast, when the second mora is /Q/ the first two moras are LL (low-low). When the second mora is /i/, initial lowering seems to apply as usual to the first mora only, LH (low-high)."</blockquote>
== Palatal consonants ==
I've read this several times and can't make heads or tails of it. [[Japanese pitch accent]] doesn't include the words "bimoraic" or even "heavy" so I'm not sure where these diverged. Clarifications, examples, or redirection appreciated! [[User:DAVilla|DAVilla]] ([[User talk:DAVilla|talk]]) 07:53, 21 August 2024 (UTC)
:This is talking about words like the following examples from the pitch accent article: kōban (first syllable is kō, which ends in /R/), manga (first syllable is man, which ends in /N/), seppuku (first syllable is sep, which ends in /Q/) and aijin (first syllable is ai, which ends in /i/). Words like kōban and manga start out with an HH or optionally LH pitch pattern, words like seppuku start with an LLH pitch pattern, and words like aijin start with an LH pitch pattern (these patterns apply when words start with a syllable of this form that is unaccented).--[[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 11:00, 21 August 2024 (UTC)


== Vowel nasalization ==
Why is ひ written as /ç/ and not /hʲ/, while き is written as /kʲ/ and not /c/? --[[User:Saledomo|Saledomo]] ([[User talk:Saledomo|talk]]) 16:32, 13 June 2020 (UTC)


Regarding the [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Japanese_phonology&oldid=1243834417 recent edits by an IP] who commented "Fixed incorrect information. Japanese's lack of nasalization can be seen objectively in MRI scans", but without adding additional sources. I have noticed contradictions between what different sources say about vowel nasalization in Japanese, and some of the previously cited sources were old and possibly outdated or based on impressionistic rather than quantitative analysis (e.g. Akamatsu 1997 pp 57, 298). So I'm not going to entirely revert the IP edits. Nevertheless, the statement "vowels next to nasal consonants do not exhibit nasalization" contradicts the currently cited source, Vance (2008), pp. 56–59, which says "a Japanese vowel is nasalized when it immediately precedes a syllable-final nasal consonant". To the IP editor, please find a source to back up the assertion that vowels are not nasalized even before syllable-final nasal consonants. The article would benefit from more recent, comprehensive sources on this topic, but we can't say something that isn't verifiable. [[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 18:43, 3 September 2024 (UTC)
== Is it possible to add Hiragana to the IPA table? ==


:This is a different computer, but that's very reasonable criticism. I used https://rtmridb.ninjal.ac.jp/ to see MRI footage. I also wasn't fully correct. The ん sound does cause nasalization of the previous vowel if it is followed by a vowel or fricative, or preceded by a nasal consonant. On the other hand, if neither of these conditions are met, nasalization doesn't happen until the ん itself. Nasalization also doesn't occur before normal nasal consonants like ま. Words I looked at included hema, kaNtaN, siNsoH, niNmu, aNzeN, and kaNbu. The website dates itself to April 1st 2024, so it's certainly quite new. I'm not experienced with Wikipedia editing and apologize for the trouble, but I want this article to be as accurate as possible. [[Special:Contributions/2605:AD80:14:7010:5044:583C:AAD3:825B|2605:AD80:14:7010:5044:583C:AAD3:825B]] ([[User talk:2605:AD80:14:7010:5044:583C:AAD3:825B|talk]]) 06:39, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
I wish to know the match between Hiragana and IPA so that I can pronounce it. --[[User:Dqwyy|dqwyy]] ([[User talk:Dqwyy|talk]]) 08:22, 10 September 2020 (UTC)
::Thank you for pointing me towards this resource! To give some background about Wikipedia policies, the norm is to make sure statements in articles can be supported by [[Wikipedia:No_original_research#Primary,_secondary_and_tertiary_sources|reliable secondary sources]]. That means any generalizations that can be made from this interesting data can't be put in the article until we can find a source to cite for analysis of this sort of data. I know having inaccurate or incomplete information in the article is frustrating, but the goal of that policy is to avoid the risk of having articles be based on amateur analysis rather than expert consensus. I'm going to try to see if I can find some papers that discuss these contextual factors to nasalization of the vowel before ん.--[[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 22:57, 5 September 2024 (UTC)

== Spinning off an onbin article ==

Since the article is getting on the longer side now, I was thinking it might make sense to create a separate article about onbin that could get more into the details of it as a historical process (rather than just part of the current language). I started a draft here: [[User:Urszag/Onbin]] but I wanted to share this suggestion now since I see @[[User:Mazamadao|Mazamadao]] has been working now on expanding the onbin section. My thought would be that specific examples of lexical onbin, such as those currently listed in the "-hito" section (shirōto, etc.) are more a matter of diachronic change than synchronic phonology, and so could be moved into a new onbin article (I would also move dialect verb forms, since this article is not intended to comprehensively describe dialects other than standard Tokyo-based Japanese), while a summary of onbin changes, and examples of grammatical onbin in standard Japanese inflection, should remain in this article. Does anyone object to moving that material once a new article is created? [[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 08:28, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
:I published [[Onbin]] as its own article. Since nobody commented, I went ahead and moved the specific examples of onbin in compounds of hito/-bito to that page.--[[User:Urszag|Urszag]] ([[User talk:Urszag|talk]]) 06:41, 13 September 2024 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 14:41, 11 November 2024

Moraic consonants

[edit]

@Fdom5997, could you clarify what useful information you think I removed in this diff? Since it involved adding separate sections for the moraic nasal and moraic obstruent, some information relevant to only one of these was put in the appropriate section. For example, I did not remove the examples [sanneɴ] 三年, sannen, 'three years' and 三枚, sanmai, 'three sheets' from the article: they remained in the appropriate section for the moraic nasal, along with new examples I added for this sound before other consonants.

When you partially reverted me, you re-added these examples under the section for the moraic obstruent, as well as re-adding the examples [sat̚.tɕi] 察知, satchi, 'inference' and 一歳, issai, 'one year old. So all of those are now listed twice in the article: do you feel that is really necessary? I did remove the phonemic transcriptions from the table, but they remain in the article in the paragraph following the table. You also duplicated the sentence "The phonemic analysis of moraic consonants is disputed."

I did remove one of the old examples, [ip̚.pai] 一杯, ippai, 'one cupful', because the analysis of geminate [pp] is a bit more complicated (as it has limited contrast with singleton [h], some more abstract analyses treat them as somehow belonging to the same phoneme) and it seemed more straightforward and therefore better to use [aka] 垢, aka, 'dirt' and [ak̚ka] 悪化, akka, 'worsening', a minimal pair supplied by Vance, as an example of a geminate plosive. Urszag (talk) 03:29, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Well, if you simply simplified it, then there should not be anything wrong there. But I think you should stop removing information that is already there. If you are going to add info, then go ahead. But you shouldn’t need to keep removing information here. Fdom5997 (talk) 03:35, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I apologize for how these big edits can make it difficult to tell whether information was removed or just rearranged. My goal wasn't to remove information, just to rearrange it into a format that I thought might be more readable. I will make another edit and only remove the portions of the article that I think are currently duplicated (so there should be no loss of information): look it over and see if you agree.--Urszag (talk) 03:39, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Juhhari

[edit]

The sokuonbin (sandhi gemination) of 十 as /(d)ʑuQ/ as in juhhari is proscribed on the basis that /uː/ does not become /uQ/ in other words, and /(d)ʑiQ/ is the prescribed form, but AFAIK nobody says jihhari aside from trained professionals. Nardog (talk) 19:51, 6 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for clarifying. After I edited that citation, I did a web search and saw a bit more about the pronunciation of 十 as /(d)ʑuQ/, e.g. 二十歳 (mentioned on Wiktionary). Other websites that mention it are HiNative, Reddit, this website. It sounds like some dictionaries recognize it now, but I haven't had time to find a citation covering that topic yet. In any case, I think it's clear that juhhari is genuinely the form that is being mentioned in the context of this discussion. Does jihhari exist even as a prescribed form, or would the prescribed form be jūhari? That's what jisho gives in its entry for the sentence "今日の一針、明日の十針。" (It cites Tatoeba, but confusingly, on that site the pronunciation of 十針 is shown as tohari.)--Urszag (talk) 20:58, 6 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
jihhari is the prescribed form AFAIU. That sentence is a fixed phrase and 十針 is read as tohari apparently. Nardog (talk) 21:07, 6 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Pitch accent clarification

[edit]

"An initial unaccented mora isn't always pronounced with low pitch when it occurs as part of a heavy syllable. Specifically, when the second mora of an accent phrase is /R/ (the latter part of a long vowel) or /N/ (the moraic nasal), the first two moras are optionally either LH (low-high) or HH (high-high). In contrast, when the second mora is /Q/ the first two moras are LL (low-low). When the second mora is /i/, initial lowering seems to apply as usual to the first mora only, LH (low-high)."

I've read this several times and can't make heads or tails of it. Japanese pitch accent doesn't include the words "bimoraic" or even "heavy" so I'm not sure where these diverged. Clarifications, examples, or redirection appreciated! DAVilla (talk) 07:53, 21 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

This is talking about words like the following examples from the pitch accent article: kōban (first syllable is kō, which ends in /R/), manga (first syllable is man, which ends in /N/), seppuku (first syllable is sep, which ends in /Q/) and aijin (first syllable is ai, which ends in /i/). Words like kōban and manga start out with an HH or optionally LH pitch pattern, words like seppuku start with an LLH pitch pattern, and words like aijin start with an LH pitch pattern (these patterns apply when words start with a syllable of this form that is unaccented).--Urszag (talk) 11:00, 21 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Vowel nasalization

[edit]

Regarding the recent edits by an IP who commented "Fixed incorrect information. Japanese's lack of nasalization can be seen objectively in MRI scans", but without adding additional sources. I have noticed contradictions between what different sources say about vowel nasalization in Japanese, and some of the previously cited sources were old and possibly outdated or based on impressionistic rather than quantitative analysis (e.g. Akamatsu 1997 pp 57, 298). So I'm not going to entirely revert the IP edits. Nevertheless, the statement "vowels next to nasal consonants do not exhibit nasalization" contradicts the currently cited source, Vance (2008), pp. 56–59, which says "a Japanese vowel is nasalized when it immediately precedes a syllable-final nasal consonant". To the IP editor, please find a source to back up the assertion that vowels are not nasalized even before syllable-final nasal consonants. The article would benefit from more recent, comprehensive sources on this topic, but we can't say something that isn't verifiable. Urszag (talk) 18:43, 3 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

This is a different computer, but that's very reasonable criticism. I used https://rtmridb.ninjal.ac.jp/ to see MRI footage. I also wasn't fully correct. The ん sound does cause nasalization of the previous vowel if it is followed by a vowel or fricative, or preceded by a nasal consonant. On the other hand, if neither of these conditions are met, nasalization doesn't happen until the ん itself. Nasalization also doesn't occur before normal nasal consonants like ま. Words I looked at included hema, kaNtaN, siNsoH, niNmu, aNzeN, and kaNbu. The website dates itself to April 1st 2024, so it's certainly quite new. I'm not experienced with Wikipedia editing and apologize for the trouble, but I want this article to be as accurate as possible. 2605:AD80:14:7010:5044:583C:AAD3:825B (talk) 06:39, 5 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for pointing me towards this resource! To give some background about Wikipedia policies, the norm is to make sure statements in articles can be supported by reliable secondary sources. That means any generalizations that can be made from this interesting data can't be put in the article until we can find a source to cite for analysis of this sort of data. I know having inaccurate or incomplete information in the article is frustrating, but the goal of that policy is to avoid the risk of having articles be based on amateur analysis rather than expert consensus. I'm going to try to see if I can find some papers that discuss these contextual factors to nasalization of the vowel before ん.--Urszag (talk) 22:57, 5 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Spinning off an onbin article

[edit]

Since the article is getting on the longer side now, I was thinking it might make sense to create a separate article about onbin that could get more into the details of it as a historical process (rather than just part of the current language). I started a draft here: User:Urszag/Onbin but I wanted to share this suggestion now since I see @Mazamadao has been working now on expanding the onbin section. My thought would be that specific examples of lexical onbin, such as those currently listed in the "-hito" section (shirōto, etc.) are more a matter of diachronic change than synchronic phonology, and so could be moved into a new onbin article (I would also move dialect verb forms, since this article is not intended to comprehensively describe dialects other than standard Tokyo-based Japanese), while a summary of onbin changes, and examples of grammatical onbin in standard Japanese inflection, should remain in this article. Does anyone object to moving that material once a new article is created? Urszag (talk) 08:28, 8 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I published Onbin as its own article. Since nobody commented, I went ahead and moved the specific examples of onbin in compounds of hito/-bito to that page.--Urszag (talk) 06:41, 13 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]