Belarusian phonology

The phonological system of the modern Belarusian language consists of at least 44 phonemes: 5 vowels and 39 consonants. Consonants may also be geminated. There is not absolute agreement on the number of phonemes, so that rarer or contextually variant sounds are included by some scholars.

Many consonants may form pairs that differ only in palatalization (called hard vs soft consonants, the latter being represented in the IPA with the symbol ʲ). In some of such pairs, the place of articulation is additionally changed (see distinctive features below). There are also unpaired consonants that have no corollary in palatalization.

Distinctive features

As an East Slavic language, Belarusian phonology is very similar to Russian phonology, and also rather similar to Ukrainian phonology. The primary differences are:[1]

Note also that, unlike in Russian, Belarusian spelling closely represents surface phonology rather than the underlying morphophonology. For example, akannye, tsyekannye, dzyekannye and the [w] allophone of /v/ and /l/ are all written. The representation of akannye in particular introduces striking differences between Russian and Belarusian orthography.

Vowels

Belarusian script IPA Description Belarusian example
i /i/ close front unrounded лiст ('leaf')
э /ɛ/ open-mid front unrounded гэты ('this one')
ы [ɨ] close central unrounded мыш ('mouse')
a /a/ open central unrounded кат ('executioner')
у /u/ close back rounded шум ('noise')
о /ɔ/ open-mid back rounded кот ('cat')

As with Russian, [ɨ] is not a separate phoneme, but an allophone of /i/ occurring after non-palatalized consonants.[5]

Consonants

The consonants of Belarusian are as follows:[6]

Labial Alveolar
/Dental
Retro
-flex
Dorsal
plain pala. plain pala. plain pala.
Nasal m n̪ʲ
Stop p
b


k
(ɡ)

(ɡʲ)
Affricate ts̪
dz̪
ts̪ʲ
dz̪ʲ
ʈʂ
ɖʐ
Fricative f
v

s
z

ʂ
ʐ
x
ɣ

ɣʲ
Approximant
(Lateral)
j (w)
l̪ʲ
Trill r

Similar to Dutch, the rare phonemes /a/ and /ɡʲ/ are present only in several borrowed words (ганак [ˈɡanak], гузік [ˈɡuzik], гандаль [ˈɡandalʲ]), or may happen in real-life pronunciation (вакзал [vaɡˈzal]), however, other borrowed words may still have the fricative pronunciation: геаграфія [ɣʲeaˈɣrafʲija] ('geography').

As a syllable coda, /v/ is pronounced [w] ([u̯], forming diphthongs) and is spelled ў.[7] There are also alternations between /l/ and this post-vocalic /v/; though restricted to the past tense of verbs,[8] [w] may derive etymologically from /l/ as with воўк [vɔwk] ('wolf'), which comes from Proto-Slavic *vьlkъ (as with Dutch goud 'gold').

The geminated variations are transcribed as follows:

Notes

  1. Sussex & Cubberly (2006:53)
  2. Padluzhny (1989:53)
  3. "Stronger than in Russian, weaker than in Polish", per Беларуская мова...
  4. Padluzhny (1989:54)
  5. Mayo (2002:890)
  6. Mayo (2002:891)
  7. S. Young (2006) "Belorussian". In the Encyclopedia of language and linguistics, 2nd ed.
  8. Mayo (2002:899)

Sources

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Belarusian pronunciation.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, December 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.