Saulteaux has twenty-four phonemic segments – seventeen consonants and seven vowels.
Consonants The consonants are four
resonants and thirteen
obstruents. The resonant nasals are labial /m/ and alveolar /n/. The resonant
glides are labio-velar and
palatal . Western Ojibwa has the
glottal stop , not . According to Logan (2001), lenis consonants are voiced between vowels (i.e., V_V) and between nasals and vowels (i.e., N_V). Fortis consonants are sometimes either
preaspirated,
preglottalized, or
extended.
Vowels The vowels are divided into three
short vowels and four
long vowels. Western Ojibwa is non-syncopating which means that weak vowels are not deleted according to metrical position. Short vowels are treated different in the Ojibwa dialects. In Saulteaux, tensing does not occur with initial short vowels. They also do not shift to . Nasal vowels are becoming denasalized; however, vowels may be nasalized before a nasal followed by a sibilant, i.e. in the phonotactically permissible sequences , , and . After a long vowel and before s or ʃ, is not pronounced the same as elsewhere, instead the preceding vowel is given a nasalized sound.
Other phonological properties of Western Ojibwa Valentine (1994) found the following phonological properties of Western Ojibwa: •
t-Epenthesis: a is inserted between the personal prefix and the vowel when a stem is vowel-initial. This is marked by (t) in texts. For example, 'I work'. •
y-Epenthesis: a can be inserted between two long vowels to maintain the phonotactic constraint that vowels do not occur next to each other in Saulteaux. When reduplication occurs on a vowel-initial root a is inserted. This is marked by (y) in texts. Preroots ending in vowels that come before vowel-initial roots also receive this epenthesis. For example, 'we had it, we were there' and '(s)he sits for a long time'. •
Glide elision: If a word that ends with a has no suffixation, then the will be elided. The glides (w,y) are optionally elided in many cases, especially in casual speech. The negative particle usually occurs without the in casual speech. •
Nasal assimilation: The nasals will assimilate to the following consonant of a cluster. So: • → / __p : is realized as labial nasal [m] when it occurs before a labial stop • → / __k : is realized as velar nasal when it occurs before a velar stop . • (nk, ng) → / __# : is realized as when it occurs at the end of the word. •
simplified to the velar nasal : this is scattered among the Saulteaux communities – in general it is a southern phenomenon and most prevalent in the southeast. •
ʃ > s: limited to Saulteaux, where the palatal and dental fricatives are common in some communities. This is not just a process of one sound assimilating to the other but both are heard. The occurrence of sibilants on the prairies is possibly coming from Plains Cree, which has only . •
s > ʃ: this feature is restricted to Saulteaux, probably under the influence of Plains Cree which has no . •
may be initially: this occurs in many Saulteaux communities; for example, the word for 'muskrat' may be variably represented as or . • Quality of is not realized with rounding like in some dialects. • iwa-stems do not restructure to . • In some dialects, > which is where assimilates with the roundness of the w, and the resulting string is simplified to . This does not happen in Western Ojibwa. • The quality of in , 'rabbit' is . • Nasal cluster simplification does not happen in this dialect. == Morphology ==