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Help:IPA/Nahuatl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<Help:IPA
This is thepronunciation key forIPA transcriptions of Nahuatl on Wikipedia.
It provides a set of symbols to represent the pronunciation of Nahuatl in Wikipedia articles, and example words that illustrate the sounds that correspond to them. Integrity must be maintained between the key and the transcriptions that link here; do not change any symbol or value without establishingconsensus on thetalk page first.
For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, seeHelp:IPA. For the distinction between[ ],/ / and ⟨ ⟩, seeIPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.
Wikipedia key to pronunciation of Nahuatl

The charts below show the way in which theInternational Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) representsNahuatl pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. For a guide to adding IPA characters to Wikipedia articles, seeTemplate:IPA andWikipedia:Manual of Style/Pronunciation § Entering IPA characters.

Distinction is made betweenClassical Nahuatl (nci; the one used in colonial times),Huasteca Nahuatl (nhe; the most spoken variant) andOrizaba Nahuatl (nlv; the third most spoken), which are the mainNahuan languages, so this pronunciation guide is based on the phonology of the three. Neither variant is preferred at Wikipedia, except in cases where a pronunciation is clearly more relevant, such as an individual in theAztec Empire or a town inLa Huasteca.

Consonants[1]
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
ncinhenlv
ʔ[2]h[3]tlahtōlli, ahki, ehēkatl, ihīyanci: uh-oh

nhe &nlv: ahead

jyāōtl,yōllōtl, āmēyalliyellow
k[4]h[5]k[6]tikchīwah, niknōtsasnci &nlv: scan

nhe: ahead

k[7]kōlōtl,kalli,kēski, ātōyākscan
[8]k[9]kwtli, nekwtlinci: squall

nhe &nlv: scan

[10]kwalli, mokwi,kwetlaxtlisquall
l[11]lichīnia, alaxox, pīwiliaclear l as inleave
ɬ[12]mātlālki, nokal, axkwallākatlWelshllwyd
mmistli, kōmitl, kwamekatlman
n[13]nāntsin,nemi, kanahnose
[14]ŋ[15]inōn, tlālpan, Āmatitlannci:Welsh fynhad

nlv: sing

ŋ[16]kenke, tlanki, Tōllāntsinkosing
p[17]pitsotl, nopa, wīptlaspan
sōlin, tlasalōlli, mōstlasack
ʃxowitl, kaxitl,xāmitl,Xālīxkoshoe
t[18]tīsatl, tlākatki, moīxtēnnostand
t͡ɬ[19]tlālli,tlitl, chīchīwalātlstop +Welshllwyd(pronouncing both simultaneously will produce a clicking sound)
t͡ʃ[20]chāntli, tōchin,chokolātlchoo
t͡s[21]tsahtsi,tsotso, wītsilincats
w[22]β[23]kichīwa, mēwa, kitlapōwianci &nhe:witch

nlv:van

ɸ[24]ihwitl, yehwān, ilwitl, nokalwannci &nhe:witch

nlv: leaf

ʍ[25]h[26]tōnatiw, kwāwtli, mochīwkehnci:which(as "hwich")

nhe &nlv: ahead

Marginal phonemes[27]
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
bbotōntik,bokōlabout
βēbofotōn, hoēbesabout,but without lips completely closed
ddesfilāroa,dīskohtoday
ðpresidēntehthis
ffōlsahyōtl,fiolin,fiērohtik, kafēnleaf
ɡgayētah, teposgarrōtehagain
ɣkastigāroa, kigānchohwiaagain,but without the tongue touching the roof of the mouth
ɲkwamonyēkoh, pinyātahcanyon
rwirrīni, rerrechokatrilled r
ɾrowēnteh, pohrrohatom(withflapping)
Vowels
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
aastatl, kallibetween fat and father[28](short)
āmatl, siwātlbetween fat and father[28] (long)
ɛ[29]epatl, metllength
ɛːēli, mētstlifairy
i[30]itskwīntli, xilincity
īpanpa, tomīnsee
o[31]nokka, tolōntikstory (short)
ōllama, mōllistory (long)
Stress
ˈPrimary stress[32] Placed immediately before the stressed syllable.
Diacritics
◌ˀwāki[ˈwaːkɪˀ]Glottal stop[33]
◌̥xālloh[ˈʃaːlːoo̥]Devoiced vowel[34]
◌̃Tōllān[ˈtoːlːãː]Nasal vowel[35]
Other representations
( )tlahtni[t͡ɬahtu(w)aːnɪˀ]Optional sound[36]
Orthography[37]
INALISEPACKJesuit
tlahtohkehtlajtojkejtlahtohquehtlàtòquê
teōkalli,kēmanteokali,kemanteōcalli,quēmmanteōcalli,quēnman
nekwtsin,mākkwawitlneuktsin, majkuauitlneuctzin, māccuahuitlneuctzin, mācquahuitl
astēkah, ahso,sintliastekaj, ajso,sintliaztēcah, ahzo,cintliaztēcâ, àço,cintli
Wītsilōpōchtli,xiwwalliUitsilopochtli, xiujpoualiHuītzilōpōchtli, xiuhhualli

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Consonants can begeminated, including[lː] (spelled asll, butnot pronounced as in Spanish) (Andrews 2003, p. 33).
  2. ^⟨h⟩ is always pronounced [ʔ] in Classical Nahuatl in the middle of a word.
  3. ^⟨h⟩ is pronounced [h] in Huasteca and Orizaba Nahuatl in the middle of a word and [ç] when it comes before ⟨y⟩.
  4. ^⟨k⟩ is always pronounced [k] in Classical Nahuatl.
  5. ^⟨k⟩ is pronounced [h] in Huasteca Nahuatl only when it comes before another ⟨k⟩ or it represents a third person singular specific object prefix and is followed by a consonant. Second ⟨k⟩ may be pronounced as [h] too.
  6. ^⟨k⟩ is pronounced [k] in Orizaba Nahuatl. There may be variation with [kʼ]~[kʰ].
  7. ^⟨k⟩ is pronounced [k] in Huasteca Nahuatl when it comes before a vowel.
  8. ^⟨kw⟩ is always pronounced [kʷ] in Classical Nahuatl.
  9. ^⟨kw⟩ is pronounced [k] in Huasteca and Orizaba Nahuatl before another consonant. In Huasteca, when it comes before a ⟨k⟩, it is pronounced [h].
  10. ^⟨kw⟩ is pronounced [kʷ] in Huasteca and Orizaba Nahuatl before a vowel. There may be variation with [kꟹ]~[gʷ]. In some towns of La Huasteca it is pronounced [ɓ].
  11. ^⟨l⟩ is always pronounced [l] when it comes before a vowel, ⟨m⟩ or ⟨n⟩. When there's a double L, it is geminated.
  12. ^⟨l⟩ is always pronounced [ɬ] when it comes before a consonant (that is neither ⟨m⟩ or ⟨n⟩) or is at the end of a word.
  13. ^⟨n⟩ is always pronounced [n] when it comes before a vowel, and pronounced [m] when it comes before ⟨m⟩ or ⟨p⟩. In Huasteca Nahuatl, when it comes before ⟨y⟩, it is pronounced [j].
  14. ^⟨n⟩ is always pronounced [n̥] in Classical Nahuatl at the end of a word. This is why ⟨n⟩ is considered the weakest consonant in Nahuatl.
  15. ^⟨n⟩ is pronounced [ŋ] in Orizaba Nahuatl at the end of a word.
  16. ^⟨n⟩ is always pronounced [ŋ] when it comes before a ⟨k⟩.
  17. ^⟨p⟩ is pronounced [p]. In Orizaba Nahuatl there may be variation with [pʼ]~[pʰ].
  18. ^⟨t⟩ is pronounced [t]. In Orizaba Nahuatl there may be variation with [tʼ]~[tʰ]. In Huasteca Nahuatl there are some cases where it is pronounced [h] only when it comes before another ⟨t⟩.
  19. ^⟨tl⟩ is pronounced [t͡ɬ]. In some towns of La Huasteca it is pronounced [t].
  20. ^⟨ch⟩ is pronounced [t͡ʃ]. It may become [ʃ] before another consonant (this depends on the variant, region and speaker).
  21. ^⟨ts⟩ is pronounced [t͡s]. It may become [s] before another consonant (this depends on the variant, region and speaker).
  22. ^⟨w⟩ is always pronounced [w] in Classical and Huasteca Nahuatl before a vowel. In some towns of La Huasteca it is pronounced as in Orizaba.
  23. ^⟨w⟩ is pronounced [β] in Orizaba Nahuatl before a vowel but never after ⟨h⟩ or ⟨l⟩. There may be variation with [w]~[v].
  24. ^⟨w⟩ is pronounced [ɸ] in Orizaba Nahuatl after ⟨h⟩ or ⟨l⟩. There may be variation with [w]~[f].
  25. ^⟨w⟩ is always pronounced [ʍ] in Classical Nahuatl when it is before another consonant or at the end of a word.
  26. ^⟨w⟩ is always pronounced [h] in Huasteca and Orizaba Nahuatl when it is before another consonant or at the end of a word.
  27. ^These are phonemes that are not common or can only be found in loanwords.
  28. ^abCloser tofat in most British and Irish accents; closer tofather in most North American, Australian and New Zealand accents.
  29. ^⟨e⟩ is generally pronounced [ɛ], but before any semiconsonant it is pronounced [e].
  30. ^⟨i⟩ is generally pronounced [i], but at the end of a word it is pronounced [ɪ]. This is why ⟨i⟩ is considered the weakest vowel in Nahuatl.
  31. ^⟨o⟩ is generally pronounced [o], but in some regions it is pronounced [u]. This happens because native speakers of Nahuatl hear these two vowels as a single sound. In Huasteca Nahuatl, when it comes before a ⟨w⟩, it is generally pronounced [u].
  32. ^Primary stress nearly always occurs on the penultimate (second to last) syllable. The only exceptions are vocative forms, in which case the final syllable is stressed, and words composed of two monosyllables. In Orizaba Nahuatl there are many words that stress the antepenultimate syllable, when the root of the nouns is two syllables or more and ends in a consonant.
  33. ^All ending vowels are pronounced with a glottal stop. This is not to be confused with the midword glottal stop found in Classical, which is written with ⟨h⟩.
  34. ^This only occurs with final ⟨h⟩ if it is the plural suffix of verbs in present tense, the plural suffix of nouns, the plural suffix of the preterite tense and of agentive nouns, the ending of the preterite nucleus of class 3 verbs (including agentive nouns), and the end of Spanish loanwords that end in a vowel.
  35. ^Nasalization only occurs when a word ends with ⟨n⟩ in Huasteca Nahuatl.
  36. ^This occurs mainly with words ending in-ia /-iya and-oa /-owa, where phonemes [j] and [w] may disappear (this depends on the variant, region and speaker).
  37. ^Andrews 2003, p. 655-658

Sources

[edit]

See also

[edit]
Comparisons
Introductory guides
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