Vowels Cheyenne has three basic
vowel qualities . The phoneme called here is usually pronounced as a phonetic , and sometimes varies to . These vowel qualities take four
tones:
high tone as in '
); low tone as in ; mid tone as in ; and rising tone as in . Tones are often not represented in the orthography. Vowels can also be voiceless (e.g. ' ). The high and low tones are
phonemic, while voiceless vowels' occurrence is determined by the
phonetic context, making them
allophones of the voiced vowels.
Consonants • The
phoneme is realized as in the environment between and (h > s / e _ t). is realized as between and (h > ʃ / e _ k) i.e. – 'my daughter', – 'your daughter', – 'his mother'. • The digraph represents assibilated ; a phonological rule of Cheyenne is that
underlying becomes
affricated before an . Therefore, "ts" is not a separate phoneme, but an
allophone of . • The sound is not a phoneme, but derives from other phonemes, including (when precedes or follows a non-front vowel, or ), and the past tense
morpheme which is pronounced when it precedes a morpheme which starts with .
Orthography The Cheyenne
orthography of 14 letters is neither a pure phonemic system nor a
phonetic transcription; it is, in the words of linguist Wayne Leman, a "pronunciation
orthography". In other words, it is a practical spelling system designed to facilitate proper pronunciation. Some allophonic variants, such as voiceless vowels, are shown. represents the phoneme symbolized , and represents .
Vowels • a – • e – • o –
Consonants • h – • k – • ' – • m – • n – • p – • s – • š – • t – • v – • x –
Tones • á, é, ó – high tone • ȧ, ė, ȯ or â, ê, ô – voiceless or whispered Low tone is usually unmarked.
Feature system for phonemes The systematic phonemes of Cheyenne are distinguished by seven two-valued features. Scholar Donald G. Frantz defined these features as follows: • Oral: primary articulation is oral (vs. at the glottis) • Vocoid (voc): central resonant (oral) continuant • Syllabic (syl): nuclear to syllable (vs. marginal) • Closure (clos): stoppage of air flow at point of primary articulation ['non-continuant'] • Nasal (nas): velic is open • Grave (grv): primary articulation at oral extremity (lips or velum) ['non-coronal' for consonants, 'back' for vowels] • Diffuse (dif): primary articulation is relatively front ['anterior'] 0 indicates the value is indeterminable/irrelevant. A blank indicates the value is specifiable, but context is required (even though any value could be inserted because the post-cyclical rules would change the value to the correct one).
Parentheses enclose values that are redundant according to the phonological rules; these values simply represent the results of these rules.
Voicing Cheyenne has 14 orthographic letters representing 13 phonemes. is written as orthographically but is not a phoneme. This count excludes the results of allophonic devoicing, which are spelled with a
dot over vowels. Devoicing naturally occurs in the last vowel of a word or phrase but can also occur in vowels at the penultimate and prepenultimate positions within a word. Non-high and is also usually devoiced preceding
h followed by a stop. Phonemic is absorbed by a preceding voiceless vowel. Examples are given below.
Penultimate devoicing • 'ax'; • 'the one who is big'; • 'knife' Devoicing occurs when certain vowels directly precede the consonants , , , , or followed by an . The rule is linked to the rule of
e-
epenthesis, which states simply that [e] appears in the environment of a consonant and a word boundary.
Prepenultimate devoicing • 'flute'; • 'sheep (pl.)'; • 'if you ask him' A vowel that does not have a high pitch is devoiced if it is followed by a voiceless fricative and not preceded by .
Special and devoicing • 'they are gathering'; • 'I regularly dance'; • 'I punched him in the mouth' Non-high and become at least partially devoiced when they are preceded by a voiced vowel and followed by an , a consonant, and two or more syllables.
Consonant devoicing 'He is drinking.' Before a voiceless segment, a consonant is devoiced.
h-absorption • 'kind' + 'imperative suffix' > • 'conjunct prefix' + 'old' + '3rd pers. suffix' > 'the one who is old' • + 'you' + 'burn' + 'suffix for some 'you-me' transitive animate forms' > ' you burn me' The is absorbed if it is preceded or followed by voiceless vowels.
Pitch and tone There are several rules that govern pitch use in Cheyenne. Pitch can be ˊ = high, unmarked = low, ˉ = mid, and ˆ = raised high. According to linguist Wayne Leman, some research shows that Cheyenne may have a stress system independent from that of pitch. If this is the case, the stress system's role is very minor in Cheyenne prosody. It would have no grammatical or lexical function, unlike pitch.
High-raising A high pitch becomes a raised high when it is not preceded by another high vowel and precedes an underlying word-final high. • 'duck'; • 'boat'
Low-to-high raising A low vowel is raised to the high position when it follows a high and is followed by a word final high. • 'ticks'; • 'I see him'; • 'cat'
Low-to-mid raising A low vowel becomes a mid when it is followed by a word-final high but not directly preceded by a high vowel. • 'sheep (sg.)'; • 'woman'; • 'he is cooking'
High pushover A high vowel becomes low if it comes after a high and followed by a phonetic low. • 'we (incl) prayed'; • 'we (incl) love him'; • 'we (excl) love'
Word-medial high raising According to Leman, "some verbal prefixes and preverbs go through the process of Word-Medial High-Raising. A high is raised if it follows a high (which is not a trigger for the High Push-Over rule) and precedes a phonetic low. One or more voiceless syllables may come between the two highs. (A devoiced vowel in this process must be underlyingly low, not an underlyingly high vowel which has been devoiced by the High-Pitch Devoicing rule.)" • 'he is eating'; • 'when I sang'; • 'I didn't give him to him'
Tone Syllables with high pitch (tone) are relatively high pitched and are marked by an acute accent, , , and . The following pairs of phrases demonstrate pitch contrasts in the Cheyenne language: • ('if I am hungry') • ('if you are hungry') • ('dog') • ('dogs') As noted by Donald G. Frantz, phonological rules dictate some pitch patterns, as indicated by the frequent shift of accent when suffixes are added (e.g. compare 'raccoon' and 'raccoons'). In order for the rules to work, certain vowels are assigned inherent accent. For example, the word for 'badger' has a permanent accent position: (sg.), (pl.)
Nonnasal reflexes of Proto-Algonquian *k The research of linguist Paul Proulx provides an explanation for how these reflexes develop in Cheyenne: "First, *
n and *
h drop and all other consonants give glottal catch before *
k. *
k then drops except in element-final position. Next, there is an increment before any remaining *
k not preceded by a glottal catch: a secondary
h (replaced by
š after
e) ) in words originating in the Cheyenne Proper dialect, and a vowel in those originating in the Sutaio (So'taa'e) dialect. In the latter dialect the *
k gives glottal catch in a word-final syllable (after the loss of some final syllables) and drops elsewhere, leaving the vowel increment. Sutaio
k clusters are all reduced to glottal catch." ==Grammar==