Panchronic phonology

Panchronic phonology is an approach to historical phonology. Its aim is to formulate generalizations about sound change that are independent of any particular language or language group.

Origin of the term

The term 'panchronic' as applied to linguistics goes back at least to Saussure, who uses it to refer to the most general principles, independently of concrete facts.[1] The panchronic program in phonology, however, is associated with the work of André-Georges Haudricourt, especially his seminal articles of 1940[2] and 1973,[3] and the preliminary synthesis published with Claude Hagège in 1978.[4]

Main tenets of the panchronic program in phonology

Beyond case studies, one of the goals of comparative linguistics is to assemble data that lead to an inventory of the common types of sound change and to an improved understanding of the conditions under which they occur. Panchronic Phonology aims to achieve this: it attempts to formulate generalizations about sound change that are independent of any particular language or language group. Haudricourt (1973) labels such an approach Panchronic Phonology. Panchronic laws are obtained by induction from a typological survey of precise diachronic events whose analysis brings out their common conditions of appearance. In turn, they can be used to shed light on individual historical situations.

Panchronic Phonology is a research program, not a full-fledged, fully realized model of language change. It has been pointed out that the book La Phonologie panchronique, co-authored by Hagège and Haudricourt, only scratches the surface of the many topics that it aims to treat.[5]

In practice, the panchronic program requires the compilation of as many attested cases of sound changes as possible, with detailed information on the state of the linguistic system where it took place. The study of sound changes in progress is another important source of information about the mechanisms of sound change; particular attention is paid to unstable states, and to the phonetic analysis of synchronic variation. One of the aims of the panchronic approach in phonology is to link up findings about synchronic variation and findings about long-term historical change.

Examples of panchronic regularities

Panchronic Phonology, Functional Phonology, Historical Phonology, and Evolutionary Phonology

Panchronic Phonology and Functional Phonology

The Panchronic program in phonology is a development from structural approaches to diachrony.[9] Structural approaches to diachrony study the way in which phonological systems respond to the causes of change. A major source of change is the constant competition between the tendency towards phonological integration and the tendency towards phonetic simplicity. Phonological economy tends to fill structural gaps in phonological systems, and phonetic economy tends to create phonological gaps. Out of the pool of potential changes, the actual direction of evolution observed in a given language depends in part on the state of its phonological system, e.g. – again taking nasality as an example – which nasal phonemes it possesses (among consonants and vowels), which phonotactic constraints they are subject to, and what functional load they have in the system.

Martinet expressed a skeptical view on the possibility of establishing panchronic laws of evolution, considering that the factors at play in linguistic change are of such complexity that no amount of detail can ever be sufficient to arrive at truly panchronic generalizations. He nonetheless considers the search for panchronic generalizations useful as a research tool: "Contrary to some other functionalists, I am not tempted to posit panchronic laws of phonological evolution. But looking for general laws may lead to what I would call the positing of useful hypotheses."[10] Martinet takes the example of the following generalization, which he rephrases from Haudricourt's findings: "The articulation of a phoneme is only apt to get weaker when and if it stands in opposition to another phoneme sharing the same features, but distinct from it on account of a more energetic or a more complex articulation." [11] Martinet concludes: "I still would prefer calling this a working hypothesis rather than a panchronic law, because I am convinced we shall one day come across a language where the weakening of consonants will be found to result from some unforeseen complex of factors." (ibid.)

Panchronic Phonology and other classical approaches to Historical Phonology

While the term panchronic is not widely used today, the aim to formulate generalizations about sound change that are independent of any particular language or language group is common to many historical linguists. Labov's generalization that "In chain shifts, peripheral vowels become more open and nonperipheral vowels become less open" (1994: 601) can be considered as a panchronic statement.[12] Several of the generalizations about nasal states and nasal processes proposed by Hyman[13] likewise aim to explain synchronic states in terms of the processes that lead up to them, and to arrive at general laws of sound change.

Panchronic Phonology and Evolutionary Phonology

The program of Panchronic Phonology is very close to that of Evolutionary Phonology,[14] although with some interesting differences. Evolutionary Phonology (as proposed by Juliette Blevins), building on work by John Ohala, considers phonetic variation as the primary source of phonological change. This emphasis on the phonetic bases of change encourages a continuous dialogue between experimental phonetics and historical phonology. Even if every scholars agree that there exist competing phonetic tendencies, according to Labov (1994: 601) they do not have explanatory or predictive power when it comes to individual cases.[15] In Panchronic Phonology, not all sound changes are straightforwardly related to phonetic tendencies, and hypothesized universals of language change based on phonetic properties are considered to seldom stand close scrutiny. According to some authors, the existence of a pool of phonetic variation is only part of the thoroughly complex story of diachronic sound change.[16][17]

Readings

(French)

(English)

References

  1. Saussure, Ferdinand de. 2011. Course in General Linguistics: Edited by Perry Meisel and Haun Saussy. (Translated by Wade Baskin.) Columbia University Press, pp. 95-96.
  2. 1 2 See Haudricourt (1940).
  3. See Haudricourt (1973).
  4. See Hagège & Haudricourt (1978).
  5. Walter, Henriette. 1980. “A Propos de ‘La Phonologie Panchronique’.” La Linguistique 16 (2): 141–144.
  6. Haudricourt, André-Georges (1965). "Les Mutations Consonantiques des Occlusives Initiales en Môn-khmer". Bulletin de La Société de Linguistique de Paris 60 (1): 160–172.
  7. Ferlus, Michel (1979). "Formation des Registres et Mutations Consonantiques dans les Langues Mon-khmer". Mon-Khmer Studies 8: 1–76.
  8. See Ferlus (2009).
  9. See an example: Martinet, André (2005). Économie Des Changements Phonétiques : Traité de Phonologie Diachronique. Paris: Maisonneuve & Larose..
  10. See Martinet (1996), p.164.
  11. See Martinet (1996), p.165.
  12. See Mazaudon & Michailovsky (2007).
  13. Hyman, Larry M. 1975. “Nasal States and Nasal Processes.” In Nasálfest: Papers from a Symposium on Nasals and Nasalization, edited by Charles A. Ferguson, Larry M. Hyman, and John Ohala, 249–264. Stanford: Stanford University.
  14. Blevins, Juliette. 2004. Evolutionary Phonology: The Emergence of Sound Patterns. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  15. Labov, William (1994). Principles of Linguistic Change. Internal Factors. Language in Society 20. Oxford: Basil Blackwell..
  16. Andersen, Henning. 2006. Comments on Juliette Blevins, ‘A Theoretical Synopsis of Evolutionary Phonology’. Theoretical Linguistics 32 (2): 167–174.
  17. Smith, Laura Catharine, and Joseph Salmons. 2008. “Historical Phonology and Evolutionary Phonology. Diachronica 25: 411–430.

External links

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