Similar to
Middle Mongol and
Written Oirat but unlike
Mongolian proper, Kalmyk exhibits
front-back vowel harmony. Unlike
Middle Mongol, however, consonants are not restricted by
harmony. For instance, the
voiced velar fricative /ɣ/ can appear in both front and back vowel words, e.g. һәәвһә /ɣæːwɣæ/ "good" and һалун /ɣalun/ "goose". Nonetheless, all consonants and
neutral reduced vowel /ə/ are influenced by harmonic status of a word, at least phonetically. The harmonic vowel pairs are: /a/~/æ/, /o/~/ø/, /u/~/y/, ~, the last pair being
allophonic. Historical
long vowels in non-initial syllables have been reduced to
short vowels, while historical short vowels have been reduced to
schwa and then, just like in
Mongolian, were replaced according to language's
phonotactics. For example,
Written Oirat ɣarān "hand-" became һаран /ɣaran/;
ɣarɣaqsan "to get out--" became һарһсн /ɣarɣsən/. Long vowels and
diphthongs in one-syllable words have been also reduced to short vowels:
sayin "good" > сән /sæn/. Nevertheless, in inflected forms of such words, short vowels tend to become elongated: сән /sæn/ "good" > сәәг /sæːgə/ "good-", күн /kyn/ "man"> күүнә /kyːnæ/ "man-". Despite that, long vowels still may be pronounced in non-initial syllables. This happens if a word consists of three syllables, second of which has a vowel /a/ or /æ/, and third syllable has a
reduced vowel /ə/. Examples include гөрәсн [gøræːsᵊn] "
saiga", туршарт [turʃaːrtə] "during", кезәңк [kezæːŋkə] "a while ago", һазрас [ɢazraːsə] "land-".
Consonants The following is an outline of the consonant system of Kalmyk. Note that since virtually all speakers of Kalmyk are
bilingual, recent borrowings from
Russian do not undergo phonological adaptation and are pronounced according to the rules of
Russian phonology, including those of
vowel reduction and
stress. • The
voiceless labiodental fricative /f/ occurs only in loanwords and
onomatopoeic terms; • The
voiced velar fricative /ɣ/ may also be released as a uvular plosive in the word-initial position as well as uvular fricative in any position, including initial; • The
voiceless velar fricative /x/ may also be pronounced as
uvular ; • The
voiced labial approximant /w/ may be released as the
voiced bilabial fricative [β]; • The
velar nasal /ŋ/ is often pronounced with a velar plosive or at the end, e.g. дөң [døŋk] "help", саң [saŋk] "treasury", маңна [maŋgna] "forehead".
Vowels • The mid central vowel /
ə/ is not orthographically written; • The open back vowel is also phonetically central ; • The (historically reduced) vowel /ə/ is phonetically released as in
harmonically front-vowel words, as in back-vowel words, and as after palatal and post-alveolar consonants /nʲ tʲ dʲ t͡ɕ d͡ʑ ʃ lʲ j/; • Although not always manifested orthographically, is a back vowel word allophone of /i/ that is only present in
hortative,
genitive and
accusative suffixes; • In native words, vowels /o oː/ and /ø øː/ can only appear in word-initial syllables.
Devoicing and assimilation Orthographic
voiced stops d, g are devoiced: келәд /kelæt/ "to speak-", бөлг /bølək/ "chapter".
Devoicing also occurs whenever there is a two-consonant
cluster with one consonant being
voiceless: /bolʃko/ "may not", таңһч /taŋxt͡ɕə/ "republic". Consonant clusters exhibit other types of assimilation: • /kx/, /gx/, /xx/ > /kk/, /kk/, /xk/: закх /zakxə~zakkə/ "to order"; өргх /ørkxə~ørkkə/ "to raise" хатхх /xatxxə~xatxkə/ "to poke"; • /n/ + /b/ > /mb/: кен /ken/ "who" + б /bə/ "" > кемб /kembə/ "who-"; • /w/ + /n/ > /mn/: тәв- /tæv-/ "to put" + /-næ/ "" > тәмнә /tæmnæ/ "to put-"; • /w/ +
voiceless consonant > /p/: ав- /awə/ "to take" + чк /t͡ɕkə/ "> апчк /apt͡ɕkə/ "to put-"; • /t͡ɕ/ + /l/ or /t/ > /ʃl/, /ʃt/: көвүчлх /køvyt͡ɕəlxə/ > көвүшлх /køvyʃəlxə/ "to adopt", ачтн /at͡ɕtən/ > аштн /aʃtən/ "to load-"; • /n/ > /ŋ/ before consonants /ɣ, g, x, k, s/:
Written Oirat sonosxu "to listen" > соңсх /soŋksxə/, түрүн /tyryn/ "first" + к /kə/ "" > түрүңк /tyryŋkə/ "first-"; • /l/ is
palatalised to /lʲ/ before
palatal affricates /t͡ɕ d͡ʑ/: болҗ /bolʲd͡ʑə/ "to become-". The
voiced bilabial stop /b/, being only restricted to word-initial position, may be pronounced as in a phrase: келҗ бәәнә /kelʲd͡ʑə bæːnæ/ > [kelʲd͡ʑ βæːnæ] "to speak- to be-". The
labial approximant or
fricative /w/ can be pronounced as: • Close rounded
vowel or in past tense
inflection: кел- /kelʲ-/ "to say" + -в /w/ "" + -в /w/ "" > келүв /kelyw/ "I said" or in consonant clusters: тарвс /tarvəs/ > тарус /tarus/ "watermelon" •
Voiced bilabial stop [b] in
past tense inflection, if the
verb stem ends in /-w/: ав- /aw-/ "to take" + -в /-w/ "" > /awbə/ "took".
Vowel reduction and phonotactics Word-initial
syllable structure is (C)V(C), meaning that in native words no word-initial clusters can occur. For non-initial syllables, however, a syllable-initial cluster of up to four consonants is allowed, meaning the maximal syllable is CCCCVC. In some
consonant clusters such as /tl tn dn dl/ a
sonorant becomes
syllabic. These clusters are also
nasally released.
The reduced vowel /ə/ is regularly preserved and can be a
syllable nucleus in the following cases: • In a word-final position: ик /i.kə/ "big", арат /a.ra.tə/ "fox", чон /t͡ɕo.nə/ "wolf"; • If, word-finally, there is either a
closed syllable or a final
open syllable with a consonant cluster: эцкнр /et͡s.kə.nər/ "father-" келчксн /kelʲ.t͡sək.sən/ "to say--" соңсгдна /soŋk.sə.gdna/ "to hear--"; • In closed non-final syllables of a multisyllabic word: шорһлҗн /ʃor.ɣəlʲ.d͡ʑən/ "ant", әәмшгтә /æ:m.ʃək.tæ/ "dangerous"; • Word-finally in the following affixes: •
Ablative -ас /-asə/; •
Accusative -иг /-igə/, -г /-gə/; •
Adjective suffix -к /-kə/; •
Completive -чк /-t͡ɕkə/; •
Imperfective converb,
admirative and
evidential suffix -җ /-dʑə/; •
Dative -д /-də/; •
Negation particle эс /esə/; •
Present tense negation particle (or
suffix) биш, -ш /biʃə/ /-ʃə/; •
Future tense participle -х /-xə/. On the other hand, the vowel /ə/ cannot form syllables on its own if the following is true: • If the following syllable is
open: бичх /bi.t͡ɕxə/ "to write", өгх /øk.kxə/ "to give"; • In
inflections of two-syllable words, if the second syllable of an inflected word has a non-reduced vowel, e.g. мөрн /mørən/ "horse" > мөрта mørtæ "with a horse", церг /t͡se.rək/ "army" > церглә /t͡serglæ/ "with an army"; • If the following syllable is open and has non-reduced vowel: тоһрун */to.ɣə.run/ > /to.ɣrun/ "grus"; шамдһа */ʃam.də.ɣa/ > /ʃam.dɣa/ "sneaky". In this case, however, reduced syllables may be released phonetically, although they do not play a role in
syllable forming.; Two-syllable words with schwa as a
nucleus of the second syllable may undergo
metathesis, thus creating an
open syllable:
Written Oirat oros "Russian" > /orəs/ > /orsə/;
ulus "country, people" > /uləs/ > /ulsə/;
oyirad "Oirat" > /øːrət/ > /øːrdə/.
Stress Kalmyk exhibits
non-phonemic stress with the last syllable (even if it ends in
schwa) being stressed. ==Grammar==