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Belarusian phonology

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Phonology of the Belarusian language
For assistance with IPA transcriptions of Belarusian for Wikipedia articles, seeHelp:IPA/Belarusian.
This article containsphonetic transcriptions in theInternational Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, seeHelp:IPA. For the distinction between[ ],/ / and ⟨ ⟩, seeIPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

The phonological system of the modernBelarusian language consists of at least 44phonemes: 5vowels and 39consonants. Consonants may also be geminated. There is no absolute agreement on the number of phonemes; rarer or contextually variant sounds are included by some scholars.[citation needed]

Many consonants may form pairs that differ only inpalatalization (calledhard andsoft consonants, the latter being represented in the IPA with the symbol ⟨ʲ⟩). In some of such pairs, the place of articulation is additionally changed (see distinctive features below). Some consonants do not have palatalized counterparts.

Distinctive features

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As anEast Slavic language, Belarusian phonology is very similar to bothRussian andUkrainian phonology. The primary differences are:[1]

Unlike in Russian but like in Ukrainian, Belarusian spelling closely represents surface phonology rather than the underlying morphophonology. For example, akannye, tsyekannye, dzyekannye and the[w] allophone of/v/ and/l/[example needed] are all written. The representation of akannye in particular introduces striking differences between Russian and Belarusian orthography.

Vowels

[edit]
FrontCentralBack
Closeiɨu
Midɛ[5]ɔ
Opena
Belarusian Cyrillic scriptBelarusian Latin scriptIPADescriptionBelarusian example
іi/i/close front unroundedлiст ('leaf')
э[6]e/ɛ/mid-central (unstressed),open-mid front unrounded (stressed)гэты ('this one')
еie,je[ʲe̞]Palatalises preceding consonant followed bymid front unrounded vowelбелы ('white')
ыy[ɨ]close central unroundedмыш ('mouse')
а, яa/a/open central unroundedкат ('executioner')
у, юu/u/close back roundedшум ('noise')
о, ёo/o/[ɔ]open-mid back roundedкот ('cat')

As with Russian,[ɨ] is not a separate phoneme, but an allophone of/i/ occurring after non-palatalized consonants.[7]

Consonants

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The consonants of Belarusian are as follows:[8]

LabialAlveolar/DentalRetroflexDorsal
plainpal.plainpal.plainpal.
Nasalmn̪ʲ
Stopvoicelesspk
voicedb(ɡ)(ɡʲ)
Affricatevoicelessts̪ts̪ʲʈʂ
voiceddz̪dz̪ʲɖʐ
Fricativevoicelessfsʂx
voicedvzʐɣɣʲ
Approximant(w)l̪ʲj
Trillr
[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion with: consonant allophonies. You can help byadding to it.(December 2018)

The rare phonemes/ɡ/ and/ɡʲ/ are present only in several borrowed words:ганак[ˈɡanak],гузік[ˈɡuzik], and in some native words containing the combinations/zɡ⁽ʲ⁾/,/dzɡ/,/dʐɡ/:мазгі[mazˈɡʲi],джгаць[d͡ʐɡat͡sʲ]. Other borrowed words have the fricative pronunciation:геаграфія[ɣʲeaˈɣrafʲija] ('geography'). In addition,[ɡ] and[ɡʲ] are allophones of/k/ and/kʲ/ respectively, when voiced byregressive assimilation, as inвакзал[vaɡˈzal] 'train station'.

In thesyllable coda,/v/ is pronounced[w] or[u̯], forming diphthongs, and is spelledў.[9][w] sometimes derives etymologically from/l/, as withвоўк[vɔwk] ('wolf'), which comes fromProto-Slavic*vьlkъ. Similar to Ukrainian, there are also alternations between[w] and/l/ in the past tense of verbs:[10] for example,ду́маў/ˈdumaw/ "(he) thought" versusду́мала/ˈdumala/ "(she) thought". This evolved historically from a form with/l/ (as in Russian:ду́мал) whichvocalized like theŁ in Polish (cognatedumał, "he mused").

Thegeminated variations are transcribed as follows:

  • падарожжа[padaˈroʐːa]
  • ззяць[zʲːatsʲ]
  • стагоддзе[staˈɣodzʲːe]
  • каханне[kaˈxanʲːe]
  • калоссе[kaˈlosʲːe]
  • ліхалецце[lʲixaˈlʲetsʲːe]
  • сярэднявечча[sʲarɛdnʲaˈvʲetʂːa].

Those sounds arose from assimilation of consonant+/j/ combinations.

References

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  1. ^Sussex & Cubberly (2006:53)
  2. ^"Stronger than in Russian, weaker than in Polish", perБеларуская мова...
  3. ^Padluzhny (1989:54)
  4. ^Русинов, Н.Д. (1977).Древнерусский язык (in Russian). Moscow: Высшая школа. p. 81.
  5. ^Blinava (1991)
  6. ^Blinava (1991)
  7. ^Mayo (2002:890)
  8. ^Mayo (2002:891)
  9. ^Young, S. (2006). "Belorussian".Encyclopedia of language and linguistics (2nd ed.).
  10. ^Mayo (2002:899)

Bibliography

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toBelarusian pronunciation.
  • Mayo, Peter (2002),"Belorussian", inComrie, Bernard; Corbett, G. G. (eds.),The Slavonic Languages, London: Routledge, pp. 887–946,ISBN 0-415-28078-8
  • Padluzhny, Ped (1989),Fanetyka belaruskai litaraturnai movy, Навука і тэхніка, p. 335,ISBN 5-343-00292-7
  • Sussex, Roland; Cubberly, Paul (2006),The Slavic Languages, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,ISBN 0-521-22315-6
  • Blinava (Блінава); Haŭroš; Kavaliova (1991),Bielaruskaja mova (Беларуская мова: Практычны дапаможнiк для абiтурыентаў), Minsk: Vyšejšaja škola (Вышэйшая школа),ISBN 5-339-00539-9

Further reading

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A–E
F–L
M–S
T–Z
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