Vowel harmony
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In
phonology Phonology is the branch of linguistics that studies how languages or dialects systematically organize their sounds or, for sign languages, their constituent parts of signs. The term can also refer specifically to the sound or sign system of a ...
, vowel harmony is an assimilatory process in which the vowels of a given domain – typically a phonological word – have to be members of the same
natural class In phonology, a natural class is a set of phonemes in a language that share certain distinctive features. A natural class is determined by participation in shared phonological processes, described using the minimum number of features necessary for d ...
(thus "in harmony"). Vowel harmony is typically long distance, meaning that the affected vowels do not need to be immediately adjacent, and there can be intervening segments between the affected vowels. Generally one vowel will trigger a shift in other vowels, either progressively or regressively, within the domain, such that the affected vowels match the relevant feature of the trigger vowel. Common phonological features that define the natural classes of vowels involved in vowel harmony include
vowel backness A vowel is a syllabic speech sound pronounced without any stricture in the vocal tract. Vowels are one of the two principal classes of speech sounds, the other being the consonant. Vowels vary in quality, in loudness and also in quantity (leng ...
, vowel height, nasalization, roundedness, and advanced and retracted tongue root. Vowel harmony is found in many agglutinative languages. The given domain of vowel harmony taking effect often spans across morpheme boundaries, and suffixes and prefixes will usually follow vowel harmony rules.


Terminology

The term ''vowel harmony'' is used in two different senses. In the first sense, it refers to any type of long distance assimilatory process of vowels, either ''progressive'' or ''regressive''. When used in this sense, the term ''vowel harmony'' is synonymous with the term ''
metaphony In historical linguistics, metaphony is a class of sound change in which one vowel in a word is influenced by another in a process of assimilation. The sound change is normally "long-distance" in that the vowel triggering the change may be s ...
''. In the second sense, ''vowel harmony'' refers only to ''progressive'' vowel harmony (beginning-to-end). For ''regressive'' harmony, the term ''umlaut'' is used. In this sense, ''metaphony'' is the general term while ''vowel harmony'' and ''umlaut'' are both sub-types of metaphony. The term ''umlaut'' is also used in a different sense to refer to a type of vowel gradation. This article will use "vowel harmony" for both progressive and regressive harmony.


"Long-distance"

Harmony processes are "long-distance" in the sense that the assimilation involves sounds that are separated by intervening segments (usually consonant segments). In other words, ''harmony'' refers to the assimilation of sounds that are ''not'' adjacent to each other. For example, a vowel at the beginning of a word can trigger assimilation in a vowel at the end of a word. The assimilation occurs across the entire word in many languages. This is represented schematically in the following diagram: : In the diagram above, the Va (type-a vowel) causes the following Vb (type-b vowel) to assimilate and become the same type of vowel (and thus they become, metaphorically, "in harmony"). The vowel that causes the vowel assimilation is frequently termed the ''trigger'' while the vowels that assimilate (or ''harmonize'') are termed ''targets''. When the vowel triggers lie within the root or stem of a word and the affixes contain the targets, this is called ''stem-controlled'' vowel harmony (the opposite situation is called ''dominant'').van der Hulst, H., & van de Weijer, J. (1995). Vowel harmony. In J. A. Goldsmith (Ed.), ''The handbook of phonological theory'' (pp. 495–534). Oxford: Blackwell. This is fairly common among languages with vowel harmony and may be seen in the Hungarian dative suffix: : The dative suffix has two different forms . The form appears after the root with back vowels ( and are back vowels). The form appears after the root with front vowels ( and are front vowels).


Features of vowel harmony

Vowel harmony often involves dimensions such as * Nasalization   (i.e. oral or nasal) ''(in this case, a nasal consonant is usually the trigger)'' In many languages, vowels can be said to belong to particular sets or classes, such as back vowels or rounded vowels. Some languages have more than one system of harmony. For instance, Altaic languages are proposed to have a rounding harmony superimposed over a backness harmony. Even among languages with vowel harmony, not all vowels need to participate in the vowel conversions; these vowels are termed ''neutral''. Neutral vowels may be ''opaque'' and block harmonic processes or they may be ''transparent'' and not affect them. Intervening consonants are also often transparent. Finally, languages that do have vowel harmony often allow for lexical ''disharmony'', or words with mixed sets of vowels even when an opaque neutral vowel is not involved. Van der Hulst & van de Weijer (1995) point to two such situations: polysyllabic trigger morphemes may contain non-neutral vowels from opposite harmonic sets and certain target morphemes simply fail to harmonize. Many
loanword A loanword (also loan word or loan-word) is a word at least partly assimilated from one language (the donor language) into another language. This is in contrast to cognates, which are words in two or more languages that are similar because t ...
s exhibit disharmony. For example, Turkish , ('time' rom Arabic ; * would have been expected.


Languages with vowel harmony


Korean

There are three classes of vowels in
Korean Korean may refer to: People and culture * Koreans, ethnic group originating in the Korean Peninsula * Korean cuisine * Korean culture * Korean language **Korean alphabet, known as Hangul or Chosŏn'gŭl **Korean dialects and the Jeju language ** ...
: positive, negative, and neutral. These categories loosely follow the front (positive) and mid (negative) vowels. Middle Korean had strong vowel harmony; however, this rule is no longer observed strictly in modern Korean. In modern Korean, it is only applied in certain cases such as onomatopoeia, adjectives,
adverbs An adverb is a word or an expression that generally modifies a verb, adjective, another adverb, determiner, clause, preposition, or sentence. Adverbs typically express manner, place, time, frequency, degree, level of certainty, etc., answering que ...
, conjugation, and
interjection An interjection is a word or expression that occurs as an utterance on its own and expresses a spontaneous feeling or reaction. It is a diverse category, encompassing many different parts of speech, such as exclamations ''(ouch!'', ''wow!''), curse ...
s. The vowel () is considered a partially neutral and a partially negative vowel. There are other traces of vowel harmony in modern Korean: many native Korean words tend to follow vowel harmony such as (, 'person'), and (, 'kitchen').


Mongolian

Mongolian exhibits both a tongue root harmony and a rounding harmony. In particular, the tongue root harmony involves the vowels: (+RTR) and (-RTR). The vowel is phonetically similar to the -RTR vowels. However, it is largely transparent to vowel harmony. Rounding harmony only affects the open vowels, . Some sources refer to the primary harmonization dimension as pharyngealization or patalalness (among others), but neither of these is technically correct. Likewise, referring to ±RTR as the sole defining feature of vowel categories in Mongolian is not fully accurate either. In any case, the two vowel categories differ primarily with regards to tongue root position, and ±RTR is a convenient and fairly accurate descriptor for the articulatory parameters involved.


Turkic languages

Turkic languages inherit their systems of vowel harmony from
Proto-Turkic Proto-Turkic is the linguistic reconstruction of the common ancestor of the Turkic languages that was spoken by the Proto-Turks before their divergence into the various Turkic peoples. Proto-Turkic separated into Oghur (western) and Common Turk ...
, which already had a fully developed system. The one exception is Uzbek, which has lost its vowel harmony due to extensive
Persian Persian may refer to: * People and things from Iran, historically called ''Persia'' in the English language ** Persians, the majority ethnic group in Iran, not to be conflated with the Iranic peoples ** Persian language, an Iranian language of the ...
influence; however, its closest relative, Uyghur, has retained Turkic vowel harmony.


Azerbaijani

Azerbaijani's system of vowel harmony has both front/back and rounded/unrounded vowels.


Tatar

Tatar has no neutral vowels. The vowel é is found only in
loanword A loanword (also loan word or loan-word) is a word at least partly assimilated from one language (the donor language) into another language. This is in contrast to cognates, which are words in two or more languages that are similar because t ...
s. Other vowels also could be found in loanwords, but they are seen as Back vowels. Tatar language also has a rounding harmony, but it is not represented in writing. O and ö could be written only in the first syllable, but vowels they mark could be pronounced in the place where ı and e are written.


Kazakh

Kazakh's system of vowel harmony is primarily a front/back system, but there is also a system of rounding harmony that is not represented by the orthography.


Kyrgyz

Kyrgyz's system of vowel harmony is primarily a front/back system, but there is also a system of rounding harmony, which strongly resembles that of Kazakh.


Turkish

Turkish has a 2-dimensional vowel harmony system, where vowels are characterised by two features: frontand rounded There are two sets of vocal harmony systems: a simple one and a complex one. The simple one is concerned with the low vowels e, a and has only the frontfeature (''e'' front vs ''a'' back). The complex one is concerned with the high vowels i, ü, ı, u and has both frontand roundedfeatures (''i'' front unrounded vs ''ü'' front rounded and ''ı'' back unrounded vs ''u'' back rounded). The close-mid vowels ''ö, o'' are not involved in vowel harmony processes.


=Front/back harmony

= Turkish has two classes of vowels''front'' and ''back''. Vowel harmony states that words may not contain both front and back vowels. Therefore, most grammatical suffixes come in front and back forms, e.g. ''Türkiye'de'' "in Turkey" but ''Almanya'da'' "in Germany".


=Rounding harmony

= In addition, there is a secondary rule that ''i'' and ''ı'' in suffixes tend to become ''ü'' and ''u'' respectively after rounded vowels, so certain suffixes have additional forms. This gives constructions such as ''Türkiye'dir'' "it is Turkey", ''kapıdır'' "it is the door", but ''gündür'' "it is day", ''paltodur'' "it is the coat".


=Exceptions

= Not all suffixes obey vowel harmony perfectly. In the suffix ''-(i)yor'', the ''o'' is invariant, while the ''i'' changes according to the preceding vowel; for example ''sönüyor'' – "he/she/it fades". Likewise, in the suffix ''-(y)ken'', the ''e'' is invariant: ''Roma'dayken'' – "When in Rome"; and so is the ''i'' in the suffix ''-(y)ebil'': ''inanılabilir'' – "credible". The suffix ''-ki'' exhibits partial harmony, never taking a back vowel but allowing only the front-voweled variant ''-kü'': ''dünkü'' – "belonging to yesterday"; ''yarınki'' – "belonging to tomorrow". Most Turkish words do not only have vowel harmony for suffixes, but also internally. However, there are many exceptions. Compound words are considered separate words with respect to vowel harmony: vowels do not have to harmonize between members of the compound (thus forms like , ''gün'' "this, day" = "today" are permissible). Vowel harmony does not apply for
loanword A loanword (also loan word or loan-word) is a word at least partly assimilated from one language (the donor language) into another language. This is in contrast to cognates, which are words in two or more languages that are similar because t ...
s, as in ''otobüs'' – from French "autobus". There are also a few native modern Turkish words that do not follow the rule (such as ''anne'' "mother" or ''kardeş'' "sibling" which used to obey vowel harmony in their older forms, ''ana'' and ''karındaş'', respectively). However, in such words, suffixes nevertheless harmonize with the final vowel; thus ''annesi'' – "his/her mother", and ''voleybolcu'' – "volleyball player". In some loanwords the final vowel is an ''a'', ''o'' or ''u'' and thus looks like a back vowel, but is phonetically actually a front vowel, and governs vowel harmony accordingly. An example is the word ''saat'', meaning "hour" or "clock", a loanword from Arabic. Its plural is ''saatler''. This is not truly an exception to vowel harmony itself; rather, it is an exception to the rule that ''a'' denotes a front vowel. Disharmony tends to disappear through analogy, especially within loanwords; e.g. ''Hüsnü'' (a man's name) < earlier ''Hüsni'', from Arabic ''husnî''; ''Müslüman'' "Moslem, Muslim (adj. and n.)" < Ottoman Turkish ''müslimân'', from Persian ''mosalmân'').


Uralic languages

Many, though not all, Uralic languages show vowel harmony between front and back vowels. Vowel harmony is often hypothesized to have existed in Proto-Uralic, though its original scope remains a matter of discussion.


Samoyedic

Vowel harmony is found in Nganasan and is reconstructed also for Proto-Samoyedic.


Hungarian


=Vowel types

= Hungarian, like its distant relative Finnish, has the same system of ''front'', ''back'', and ''intermediate'' (neutral) vowels but is more complex than the one in Finnish, and some vowel harmony processes. The basic rule is that words including at least one back vowel get back vowel suffixes (''karba'' – in(to) the arm), while words excluding back vowels get front vowel suffixes (''kézbe'' – in(to) the hand). Single-vowel words which have only the neutral vowels (''i'', ''í'' or ''é'') are unpredictable, but ''e'' takes a front-vowel suffix. One essential difference in classification between Hungarian and Finnish is that standard Hungarian (along with 3 out of 10 local dialects) does not observe the difference between Finnish 'ä' and 'e' the Hungarian front vowel 'e' is closely pronounced as the Finnish front vowel 'ä' . 7 out of the 10 local dialects have the vowel ë which has never been part of the Hungarian alphabet, and thus is not used in writing.


=Behaviour of neutral vowels

= ''Unrounded front vowels'' (or ''Intermediate'' or ''neutral'' vowels) can occur together with either ''back vowels'' (e.g. ''répa'' carrot, ''kocsi'' car) or ''rounded front vowels'' (e.g. ''tető'', ''tündér''), but ''rounded front vowels'' and ''back vowels'' can occur together only in words of foreign origins (e.g. ''sofőr'' = chauffeur, French word for driver). The basic rule is that words including at least one back vowel take back vowel suffixes (e.g. ''répá, ban'' in a carrot, ''kocsi, ban'' in a car), while words excluding back vowels usually take front vowel suffixes (except for words including only the vowels ''i'' or ''í'', for which there is no general rule, e.g. ''liszt, et'', ''hid, at''). Some other rules and guidelines to consider: * Compound words get suffix according to the last word, e.g.: ''ártér'' (floodplain) compound of ''ár'' + ''tér'' gets front vowel suffix just as the word ''tér'' when stands alone (''tér, en'', ''ártér, en'') * In case of words of obvious foreign origins: only the last vowel counts (if it is not ''i'' or ''í''): ''sofőr, höz, nüansz, szal, generál, ás, október, ben, parlament, ben, szoftver, rel'' ** If the last vowel of the foreign word is ''i'' or ''í'', then the last but one vowel will be taken into consideration, e.g. ''papír, hoz'', ''Rashid, dal''. If the foreign word includes only the vowels ''i'' or ''í'' then it gets front vowel suffix, e.g.: ''Mitch-nek'' ( = ''for Mitch'') ** There are some non-Hungarian geographical names that have no vowels at all (e.g. the Croatian island of ''Krk''), in which case as the word does not include back vowel, it gets front vowel suffix (e.g. ''Krk-re'' = to Krk) * For acronyms: the last vowel counts (just as in case of foreign words), e.g.: ''HR'' (pronounced: ''há-er'') gets front vowel suffix as the last pronounced vowel is front vowel (''HR-rel'' = with HR) * Some 1-syllable Hungarian words with i, í or é are strictly using front suffixes (''gép, re, mély, ről, víz'' > ''viz, et'', ''hír, ek''), while some others can take back suffixes only (''héj, ak, szíj, ról'', ''nyíl'' > ''nyil, at'', ''zsír, ban'', ''ír, ás'') * Some foreign words that have fit to the Hungarian language and start with back vowel and end with front vowel can take either front or back suffixes (so can be optionally considered foreign word or Hungarian word): ''farmer, ban'' or ''farmer, ben''


=Suffixes with multiple forms

= Grammatical suffixes in Hungarian can have one, two, three, or four forms: * ''one form'': every word gets the same suffix regardless of the included vowels (e.g. ''-kor'') * ''two forms'' (most common): words get either back vowel or front vowel suffix (as mentioned above) (e.g. ''-ban/-ben'') * ''three forms'': there is one back vowel form and two front vowel forms; one for words whose last vowel is rounded front vowel and one for words whose last vowel is not rounded front vowel (e.g. ''-hoz/-hez/-höz'') * ''four forms'': there are two back vowel forms and two front vowel forms (e.g. -''ot/-at/-et/-öt'' or simply ''-t'', if the last sound is a vowel) An example on basic numerals:


Mansi

Vowel harmony occurred in Southern Mansi.


Khanty

In the Khanty language, vowel harmony occurs in the Eastern dialects, and affects both inflectional and derivational suffixes. The Vakh-Vasyugan dialect has a particularly extensive system of vowel harmony, with seven different front-back pairs: The vowels , (front) and (back) can only occur in the first syllable of a word, and do not actively participate in vowel harmony, but they do trigger it. Vowel harmony is lost in the Northern and Southern dialects, as well as in the Surgut dialect of Eastern Khanty.


Mari

Most varieties of the
Mari language The Mari language (Mari: , ''marij jylme''; russian: марийский язык, ''mariyskiy yazyk''), formerly known as the Cheremiss language, spoken by approximately 400,000 people, belongs to the Uralic language family. It is spoken primar ...
have vowel harmony.


Erzya

The Erzya language has a limited system of vowel harmony, involving only two vowel phonemes: (front) versus (back). Moksha, the closest relative of Erzya, has no phonemic vowel harmony, though has front and back allophones in a distribution similar to the vowel harmony in Erzya.


Finnic languages

Vowel harmony is found in most of the
Finnic languages The Finnic (''Fennic'') or more precisely Balto-Finnic (Balto-Fennic, Baltic Finnic, Baltic Fennic) languages constitute a branch of the Uralic language family spoken around the Baltic Sea by the Baltic Finnic peoples. There are around 7 mi ...
. It has been lost in Livonian and in Standard Estonian, where the front vowels ''ü'' ''ä'' ''ö'' occur only in the first (stressed) syllable.
South Estonian South Estonian, spoken in south-eastern Estonia, encompasses the Tartu, Mulgi, Võro and Seto varieties. There is no academic consensus on its status, as some linguists consider South Estonian a dialect group of Estonian whereas other linguist ...
Võro (and
Seto Seto may refer to: Places * Seto, Aichi, production place of Japanese pottery and venue of Expo 2005 * Seto, Ehime, facing the Seto Inland Sea *Seto, Okayama, adjacent to Okayama, in Okayama Prefecture *Seto Inland Sea of Japan * Setomaa (''Seto ...
) language as well as some
orth Orth can refer to: Places * Orth, Minnesota, an unincorporated community in Nore Township, Minnesota, United States * Orth an der Donau, a town in Gänserndorf, Lower Austria, Austria * Orth House, a historic house in Winnetka, Illinois, United S ...
Estonian dialects, however, retain vowel harmony.


=Finnish

= In the Finnish language, there are three classes of vowels''front'', ''back'', and ''neutral'', where each front vowel has a back vowel pairing. Grammatical endings such as case and derivational endingsbut not encliticshave only archiphonemic vowels U, O, A, which are realized as either back or front inside a single word. From vowel harmony it follows that the initial syllable of each single (non-compound) word controls the frontness or backness of the entire word. Non-initially, the neutral vowels are transparent to and unaffected by vowel harmony. In the initial syllable: # a back vowel causes all non-initial syllables to be realized with back (or neutral) vowels, e.g. ''pos+ahta+(t)a'' → ''posahtaa'' # a front vowel causes all non-initial syllables to be realized with front (or neutral) vowels, e.g. ''räj+ahta+(t)a'' → ''räjähtää''. # a neutral vowel acts like a front vowel, but does not control the frontness or backness of the word: if there are back vowels in non-initial syllables, the word acts like it began with back vowels, even if they come from derivational endings, e.g. ''sih+ahta+(t)a'' → ''sihahtaa'' cf. ''sih+ise+(t)a'' → ''sihistä'' For example: * ''kaura'' begins with back vowel → ''kauralla'' * ''kuori'' begins with back vowel → ''kuorella'' * ''sieni'' begins without back vowels → ''sienellä'' (not *''sienella'') * ''käyrä'' begins without back vowels → ''käyrällä'' * ''tuote'' begins with back vowels → ''tuotteessa'' * ''kerä'' begins with a neutral vowel → ''kerällä'' * ''kera'' begins with a neutral vowel, but has a noninitial back vowel → ''keralla'' Some dialects that have a sound change opening diphthong codas also permit archiphonemic vowels in the initial syllable. For example, standard 'ie' is reflected as 'ia' or 'iä', controlled by noninitial syllables, in the Tampere dialect, e.g. ''tiä'' ← ''tie'' but ''miakka'' ← ''miekka''. ... as evidenced by ''tuotteessa'' (not *''tuotteessä''). Even if phonologically front vowels precede the suffix ''-nsa'', grammatically it is preceded by a word controlled by a back vowel. As shown in the examples, neutral vowels make the system unsymmetrical, as they are front vowels phonologically, but leave the front/back control to any grammatical front or back vowels. There is little or no change in the actual vowel quality of the neutral vowels. As a consequence, Finnish speakers often have problems with pronouncing foreign words which do not obey vowel harmony. For example, ''olympia'' is often pronounced ''olumpia''. The position of some loans is unstandardized (e.g. ''chattailla''/''chättäillä'') or ill-standardized (e.g. ''polymeeri'', sometimes pronounced ''polumeeri'', and ''autoritäärinen'', which violate vowel harmony). Where a foreign word violates vowel harmony by not using front vowels because it begins with a neutral vowel, then last syllable generally counts, although this rule is irregularly followed. Experiments indicate that e.g. ''miljonääri'' always becomes (front) ''miljonääriä'', but ''marttyyri'' becomes equally frequently both ''marttyyria'' (back) and ''marttyyriä'' (front), even by the same speaker. With respect to vowel harmony, compound words can be considered separate words. For example, ''syyskuu'' ("autumn month" i.e. September) has both ''u'' and ''y'', but it consists of two words ''syys'' and ''kuu'', and declines ''syys·kuu·ta'' (not *''syyskuutä''). The same goes for enclitics, e.g. ''taaksepäin'' "backwards" consists of the word ''taakse'' "to back" and ''-päin'' "-wards", which gives e.g. ''taaksepäinkään'' (not *''taaksepäinkaan'' or *''taaksepainkaan''). If fusion takes place, the vowel is harmonized by some speakers, e.g. ''tälläinen'' pro ''tällainen'' ← ''tämän lainen''. Some Finnish words whose stems contain only neutral vowels exhibit an alternating pattern in terms of vowel harmony when inflected or forming new words through derivation. Examples include ''meri'' "sea", ''meressä'' "in the sea" ( inessive), but ''merta'' (
partitive In linguistics, the partitive is a word, phrase, or case that indicates partialness. Nominal partitives are syntactic constructions, such as "some of the children", and may be classified semantically as either set partitives or entity partitives ba ...
), not *''mertä''; ''veri'' "blood", ''verestä'' "from the blood" ( elative), but ''verta'' (partitive), not *''vertä''; ''pelätä'' "to be afraid", but ''pelko'' "fear", not *''pelkö''; ''kipu'' "pain", but ''kipeä'' "sore", not *''kipea''. Helsinki slang has slang words that have roots violating vowel harmony, e.g. ''Sörkka''. This can be interpreted as Swedish influence.


Yokuts

Vowel harmony is present in all Yokutsan languages and dialects. For instance, Yawelmani has 4 vowels (which additionally may be either long or short). These can be grouped as in the table below. Vowels in suffixes must harmonize with either or its non- counterparts or with or non- counterparts. For example, the vowel in the aorist suffix appears as when it follows a in the root, but when it follows all other vowels it appears as . Similarly, the vowel in the nondirective gerundial suffix appears as when it follows a in the root; otherwise it appears as . In addition to the harmony found in suffixes, there is a harmony restriction on word stems where in stems with more than one syllable all vowels are required to be of the same lip rounding and tongue height dimensions. For example, a stem must contain all high rounded vowels or all low rounded vowels, etc. This restriction is further complicated by (i) long high vowels being lowered and (ii) an epenthetic vowel which does not harmonize with stem vowels.


Sumerian

There is some evidence for vowel harmony according to vowel height or ATR in the prefix i3/e- in inscriptions from pre- Sargonic
Lagash Lagash (cuneiform: LAGAŠKI; Sumerian: ''Lagaš''), was an ancient city state located northwest of the junction of the Euphrates and Tigris rivers and east of Uruk, about east of the modern town of Ash Shatrah, Iraq. Lagash (modern Al-Hiba) w ...
(the specifics of the pattern have led a handful of scholars to postulate not only an phoneme, but even an and, most recently, an ) Many cases of partial or complete assimilation of the vowel of certain prefixes and suffixes to one in the adjacent syllable are reflected in writing in some of the later periods, and there is a noticeable though not absolute tendency for disyllabic stems to have the same vowel in both syllables. What appears to be vowel contraction in hiatus (*/aa/, */ia/, */ua/ > a, */ae/ > a, */ue/ > u, etc.) is also very common.


Other languages

Vowel harmony occurs to some degree in many other languages, such as * Several dialects of Arabic (see imala) including: ** Palestinian Arabic ** Iraqi Arabic **
Lebanese Arabic Lebanese Arabic ( ar, عَرَبِيّ لُبْنَانِيّ ; autonym: ), or simply Lebanese ( ar, لُبْنَانِيّ ; autonym: ), is a variety of North Levantine Arabic, indigenous to and spoken primarily in Lebanon, with significant ...
*
Akan languages Akan may refer to: People and languages *Akan people, an ethnic group in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire *Akan language, a language spoken by the Akan people *Kwa languages, a language group which includes Akan * Central Tano languages, a language group ...
(tongue root position) * Assamese * Australian Aboriginal languages ** Jingulu ** Warlpiri * Assyrian Neo-Aramaic (vowel harmony of one particular timbre across all vowels of a word) * Several Bantu languages such as: ** Standard Lingala (height) ** Kgalagadi (height)Derek Nurse, Gérard Philippson, ''The Bantu languages'', Routledge, 2003. ** Malila (height) ** Phuthi (right-to-left and left-to-right) **
Shona Shona often refers to: * Shona people, a Southern African people * Shona language, a Bantu language spoken by Shona people today Shona may also refer to: * ''Shona'' (album), 1994 album by New Zealand singer Shona Laing * Shona (given name) * S ...
** Southern Sotho (right-to-left and left-to-right) **
Northern Sotho Northern Sotho, or as an endonym, is a Sotho-Tswana language spoken in the northeastern provinces of South Africa. It is sometimes referred to as or , its main dialect, through synecdoche. According to the South African National Census o ...
(right-to-left and left-to-right) **
Tswana Tswana may refer to: * Tswana people, the Bantu speaking people in Botswana, South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Zambia, and other Southern Africa regions * Tswana language, the language spoken by the (Ba)Tswana people * Bophuthatswana, the former ba ...
(right-to-left and left-to-right) * Bezhta * Bengali * Some
Chadic languages The Chadic languages form a branch of the Afroasiatic language family. They are spoken in parts of the Sahel. They include 150 languages spoken across northern Nigeria, southern Niger, southern Chad, the Central African Republic, and northern Cam ...
, such as Buwal * Chukchi * Coeur d'Alene (tongue root position and height) *
Coosan languages The Coosan (also Coos or Kusan) language family consists of two languages spoken along the southern Oregon coast. Both languages are now extinct. Classification * Hanis ''†'' * Miluk ''†'' ( Lower Coquille) Melville Jacobs (1939) says tha ...
*
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languages * Iberian languages ** Astur-Leonese ** Galician and Portuguese dialects ** Catalan/
Valencian Valencian () or Valencian language () is the official, historical and traditional name used in the Valencian Community (Spain), and unofficially in the El Carche comarca in Murcia (Spain), to refer to the Romance language also known as Catal ...
** Eastern Andalusian Spanish ** Murcian Spanish *
Igbo Igbo may refer to: * Igbo people, an ethnic group of Nigeria * Igbo language, their language * anything related to Igboland, a cultural region in Nigeria See also * Ibo (disambiguation) * Igbo mythology * Igbo music * Igbo art * * Igbo-Ukwu, a ...
(tongue root position) * Italo-Romance languages: several
Swiss Italian The Italian language in Switzerland or Swiss Italian ( it, italiano svizzero) is the variety of the Italian language taught in the Italian-speaking area of Switzerland. Italian is spoken natively by about 700,000 people in the canton of Ticino ...
dialects (including total vowel harmony systems). *
Japanese language is spoken natively by about 128 million people, primarily by Japanese people and primarily in Japan, the only country where it is the national language. Japanese belongs to the Japonic or Japanese- Ryukyuan language family. There have been ...
- in some of the Kansai dialects. Additionally, some consider that vowel harmony must have existed at one time in
Old Japanese is the oldest attested stage of the Japanese language, recorded in documents from the Nara period (8th century). It became Early Middle Japanese in the succeeding Heian period, but the precise delimitation of the stages is controversial. Old Jap ...
, though there is no broad consensus. See the pertinent . *
Maiduan languages Maiduan (also Maidun, Pujunan) is a small endangered language family of northeastern California. Family division The Maiduan consists of 4 languages: # Maidu ''†'' (also known as Maidu proper, Northeastern Maidu, Mountain Maidu) # Chico '' ...
* Nez Percé *
Nilotic languages The Nilotic languages are a group of related languages spoken across a wide area between South Sudan and Tanzania by the Nilotic peoples. Etymology The word Nilotic means of or relating to the Nile River or to the Nile region of Africa. Dem ...
* Buchan Scots is a Scots dialect with vowel height harmony, compare "hairy", "really". This effect is blocked by
voiced Voice or voicing is a term used in phonetics and phonology to characterize speech sounds (usually consonants). Speech sounds can be described as either voiceless (otherwise known as ''unvoiced'') or voiced. The term, however, is used to refer ...
obstruents and certain consonant clusters: "baby", "lumpy". * Somali *
Takelma The Takelma (also Dagelma) are a Native American people who originally lived in the Rogue Valley of interior southwestern Oregon. Most of their villages were sited along the Rogue River. The name ''Takelma'' means "(Those) Along the River". His ...
* Telugu * Several Tibetic languages, including
Lhasa Tibetan Lhasa Tibetan (), or Standard Tibetan, is the Tibetan dialect spoken by educated people of Lhasa, the capital of the Tibetan Autonomous Region of China. It is an official language of the Tibet Autonomous Region. In the traditional "three-branc ...
* Tungusic languages, such as Manchu *Tuvan language, TuvanSmolek, Amy (2011). Vowel Harmony in Tuvan and Igbo: Statistical and Optimality Theoretic Analyses. Undergraduate Thesis, Swarthmore College https://www.swarthmore.edu/sites/default/files/assets/documents/linguistics/2011_Smolek.pdf * Utian languages *Urhobo language, Urhobo * Yurok language, Yurok and Qiangic languages, Qiang are unique in having rhotic vowel harmony.


Other types of harmony

Although vowel harmony is the most well-known harmony, not all types of harmony that occur in the world's languages involve only vowels. Other types of harmony involve consonants (and is known as consonant harmony). Rarer types of harmony are those that involve Tone (linguistics), tone or both vowels and consonants (e.g. ''postvelar harmony'').


Vowel–consonant harmony

Some languages have harmony processes that involve an interaction between vowels and consonants. For example, Chilcotin language, Chilcotin has a phonological process known as ''vowel flattening'' (i.e. post-velar harmony) where vowels must harmonize with uvular and pharyngealisation, pharyngealized consonants. Chilcotin has two classes of vowels: * "flat" vowels * non-"flat" vowels Additionally, Chilcotin has a class of pharyngealized "flat" consonants . Whenever a consonant of this class occurs in a word, all preceding vowels must be flat vowels. If flat consonants do not occur in a word, then all vowels will be of the non-flat class: Other languages of this region of North America (the Plateau culture area), such as St'at'imcets language#Phonological processes, St'át'imcets, have similar vowel–consonant harmonic processes.


Syllabic synharmony

Syllabic synharmony was a process in the Proto-Slavic language ancestral to all modern Slavic languages. It refers to the tendency of frontness (palatality) to be generalised across an entire syllable. It was therefore a form of consonant–vowel harmony in which the property 'palatal' or 'non-palatal' applied to an entire syllable at once rather than to each sound individually. The result was that back vowels were fronted after ''j'' or a palatal consonant, and consonants were palatalised before ''j'' or a front vowel. Diphthongs were harmonized as well, although they were soon monophthongized because of a tendency to end syllables with a vowel (syllables were or became open). This rule remained in place for a long time, and ensured that a syllable containing a front vowel always began with a palatal consonant, and a syllable containing ''j'' was always preceded by a palatal consonant and followed by a front vowel. A similar process occurs in Skolt Sami language, Skolt Sami, where palatalization of consonants and fronting of vowels is a Skolt Sami language#Suprasegmentals, suprasegmental process applying to a whole syllable. Suprasegmental palatalization is marked with the letter ''ʹ'', which is a Modifier letter prime, for example in the word ''vääʹrr'' 'mountain, hill'.


See also

* A-mutation * Ablaut reduplication * Apophony * Consonant harmony * Consonant mutation * Germanic umlaut * I-mutation * Metaphony * U-mutation (disambiguation), U-mutation


References


Bibliography


Arias, Álvaro (2006): «La armonización vocálica en fonología funcional (de lo sintagmático en fonología a propósito de dos casos de metafonía hispánica)», ''Moenia'' 11: 111–139.
* * Jacobson, Leon Carl. (1978). ''DhoLuo vowel harmony: A phonetic investigation''. Los Angeles: University of California. * Krämer, Martin. (2003). ''Vowel harmony and correspondence theory''. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. * Li, Bing. (1996). ''Tungusic vowel harmony: Description and analysis''. The Hague: Holland Academic Graphics. * *Piggott, G. & van der Hulst, H. (1997). Locality and the nature of nasal harmony. ''Lingua, 103'', 85-112. * * Shahin, Kimary N. (2002). ''Postvelar harmony''. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Pub. * Smith, Norval; & Harry van der Hulst (Eds.). (1988). ''Features, segmental structure and harmony processes'' (Pts. 1 & 2). Dordrecht: Foris. (pt. 1), (pt. 2 ) . * Vago, Robert M. (Ed.). (1980). ''Issues in vowel harmony: Proceedings of the CUNY Linguistic Conference on Vowel Harmony, 14 May 1977''. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins. * Vago, Robert M. (1994). Vowel harmony. In R. E. Asher (Ed.), ''The Encyclopedia of language and linguistics'' (pp. 4954–4958). Oxford: Pergamon Press. *Walker, R. L. (1998). ''Nasalization, Neutral Segments, and Opacity Effects'' (Doctoral dissertation). University of California, Santa Cruz. {{DEFAULTSORT:Vowel Harmony Assimilation (linguistics) Vowel-harmony languages,