Christianity: Details about 'Long Vowel'
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In linguistics, vowel length is the perceived duration of a vowel sound. Often the chroneme, or the "longness", acts like a consonant, and may etymologically be one such as in Finnish. While not distinctive in most dialects of English, vowel length is an important phonemic factor in many other languages, for instance in Czech, Fijian, Finnish, Japanese, Hawaiian, Classical Latin, Latvian, Old English, Samoan, Thai, and Vietnamese. It plays a phonetic role in the majority of English dialects, and is said to be phonemic in a few dialects, such Australian English and New Zealand English. It also play a lesser phonetic role in Cantonese, which is exceptional among the spoken variants of Chinese. Most languages do not distinguish vowel length, and for those that do, usually the only distinction is between short vowels and long vowels. There are very few languages that distinguish three vowel lengths, for instance Mixe. Some languages, such as Finnish, Estonian and Japanese also have words where long vowels are immediately followed by more vowels, e.g. Japanese hōō "phoenix" or Estonian jäääär "ice edge".
Vowel length and related featuresStress is often reinforced by allophonic vowel length, especially when it is lexical. For example, French long vowels always occur on stressed syllables. Finnish, a language with two phonemic lengths, indicates the stress by adding allophonic length. This gives four distinctive lengths and five physical lengths: short and long stressed vowels, short and long unstressed vowels, and a half-long vowel, which is a short vowel found in a syllable immediately preceded by a stressed short vowel, e.g. i-so. Among the languages that have distinctive vowel length, there are some where it may only occur in stressed syllables, e.g. in the Alemannic German dialect. In languages such as Finnish or Classical Latin, vowel length is distinctive in unstressed syllables as well. In Baltic-Finnic languages, such as Finnish, vowel length is sometimes better analyzed as a "diphthong" of two identical vowels, since the etymology and morphology is the same as for diphthongs, and not a feature of the vowel itself. In some cases, it is caused by a following chroneme, which is etymologically a consonant, e.g. jää " ← Proto-Finno-Ugric *jäŋe. In noninitial syllables, it is ambiguous if long vowels are vowel clusters — poems written in the Kalevala metre often syllabicate between the vowels, and an (etymologically original) intervocalic -h- is seen in this and some modern dialects. Phonemic vowel lengthMany languages have phonemic long and short vowels: Japanese, Finnish, Hungarian, etc. Estonian has three distinctive lengths, but the third is suprasegmental, as it has developed from the allophonic variation caused by now-deleted grammatical markers. For example, half-long 'aa' in saada comes from the agglutination *saata+ka "send+(imperative)", and the overlong 'aa' in saada comes from *saa+ta "get+(infinitive)". One of the very few languages to have three lengths, independent of vowel quality or syllable structure, is Mixe. An example from Mixe is "guava", "spider", "knot". Similar claims have been made for Yavapai and Wichita. Four-way distinctions have been claimed, but these are actually long-short distinctions on adjacent syllables. For example, in kiKamba, there is , , , "hit", "dry", "bite", "we have chosen for everyone and are still choosing". Long vowels in EnglishVowel length, when applied to English, has several different related meanings. Traditional non-phonetic "long" and "short" vowelsTraditionally, the vowels /ei iː ai ou juː/ (as in bait beet bite boat beauty) are said to be the "long" counterparts of the vowels /æ e ɪ ɒ ʊ/ (as in bat bet bit bot put) which are said to be "short". This terminology reflects their pronunciation before the Great Vowel Shift, rather than their present-day pronunciations. Allophonic vowel lengthIn certain dialects of the modern English language, for instance General American, there is allophonic vowel length: vowel phonemes are realized as long vowel allophones before voiced consonant phonemes in the coda of a syllable. For example, the vowel phoneme /æ/ in /ˈbæt/ ‘bat’ is realized as a short allophone in , because the /t/ phoneme is unvoiced, while the same vowel /æ/ phoneme in /ˈbæd/ ‘bad’ is realized as a long allophone in , because /d/ is voiced. (Incidentally, the final consonant allophones in these syllables also have different relative lengths; the of bat is longer than the of bad.) Symbolic representation of the two allophonic rules:
Phonemic vowel lengthIn Australian English, there is distinctive phonemic vowel length which distinguishes such minimal pairs as the following (examples from Australian English):
EtymologiesThe long vowel may often be traced to assimilation. For a clear-cut example, consider spoken Finnish suurii < suuria: the chroneme is the only marker for the partitive case. In Australian English, the second element of a diphthong has assimilated to the preceding vowel, giving the pronunciation of bared as , creating a contrast with bed . Another etymology is the vocalization of a fricative such as the voiced velar fricative or voiced palatal fricative, e.g. Finnish illative case, or even an approximant, as the English 'r'. Estonian, of Balto-Finnic languages, exhibits a rare phenomenon, where allophonic length variation becomes phonemic following the deletion of the suffixes causing the allophony. Estonian already distinguishes two vowel lengths, but a third one has been introduced by this phenomenon. For example, the Balto-Finnic imperative marker *-k caused the preceding vowels to be articulated shorter, and following the deletion of the marker, the allophonic length became phonemic, as shown in the example below. Similarly, the Australian English phoneme /æː/ was created by the incomplete application of a rule extending /æ/ before certain voiced consonants, a phenomenon known as the bad-lad split. Notations in the Latin alphabetDiacritics
Additional letters
Other signs
Notations in other writing systemsIn non-Latin writing systems, a variety of mechanisms have also evolved.
See also
ReferenceVokalquantität 長母音 長母音
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