Are neutral roots in Uyghur really neutral? Evaluating a covert phonemic contrast

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3765/amp.v9i0.5174

Keywords:

Uyghur, covert contrast, exceptionality, vowel harmony, transparent vowels

Abstract

This paper looks at the case of so-called neutral roots in Uyghur (Turkic: China), whose idiosyncratic behavior with respect to the backness harmony system has been analyzed as stemming from a covert vowel contrast. Based on considerations of the structural properties of the language and the results of an experimental study, we suggest that an analysis based on lexical exceptionality is more parsimonious than the traditional analysis, unifying the treatment of neutral roots with other cases of exceptionality in the harmony system and accounting for a relationship between the patterning of roots and their frequency. We close by discussing implications for covert contrast analyses in general.

Author Biographies

  • Connor Mayer, University of California, Irvine
    Assistant professor, Department of Language Science
  • Travis Major, University of Southern California
    Postdoctoral fellow, Department of Linguistics
  • Mahire Yakup, Nazarbayev University
    Assistant professor of World Languages

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Published

2022-08-05

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Section

Supplemental Proceedings