Maldivian phonology

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The phonemic inventory of Maldivian consists of 29 consonants and 10 vowels. Like other modern Indo-Aryan languages the Maldivian phonemic inventory shows an opposition of long and short vowels, of dental and retroflex consonants as well as single and geminate consonants.

Vowels[1]
Front Central Back
short long short long short long
Close i u
Mid e o
Open (æː) a
  • [æː] is developed as a sound from the diphthong /ai/.
  • The short open back vowel is phonetically central [ä].
Consonants[1]
Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɳ (ɲ)*
Stop/
Affricate
p
 
b
ᵐb
t
 
d
ⁿd
ʈ
 
ɖ
ᶯɖ

 

 
k
 
ɡ
ᵑɡ
Fricative f s z ʂ ʃ h
Approximant ʋ l ɭ j
Tap ɽ
  • The status of /ɲ/ as a phoneme is unclear. Except for two words, /ɲamɲam/ 'cynometra caulinora' (a kind of fruit) and /ɲaviyani/ 'Gnaviyani' (alphabet letter), the /ɲ/ only occurs as the result of the fusion of /n/ and /i/: /du:ni/ 'bird', /du:ɲɲek/ 'a bird'.
  • /ʋ/ can occasionally be heard as a fricative [v], it has a [w] allophone occurring between vowel sounds /a/ and /u/.

Dental and retroflex stops are contrastive in Maldivian. For example: maḍun means ‘quietly’ madun means ‘seldom’. The segments /t/ and /d/ are articulated just behind the front teeth. The Maldivian segments /ʈ/, /ɖ/, /ʂ/, and /ɭ/ are not truly retroflex, but apical, produced at the very rear part of the alveolar ridge.

Maldivian has the prenasalized stops /ᵐb/, /ⁿd/, /ᶯɖ/, and /ᵑɡ/. These segments occur only intervocalically: /haⁿdu/ ('moon') /haᶯɖuː/ ('uncooked rice') and /aᵑɡa/ ('mouth'). Maldivian and Sinhalese are the only Indo-Aryan languages that have prenasalized stops.

The influence of other languages has played a great role in Maldivian phonology. For example, the phoneme /z/ comes entirely from foreign influence:[citation needed] /ɡaːziː/ ('judge') is from Persian, /maːziː/ ('past') is from Urdu.

The phoneme /p/ also occurs only in borrowed words in Modern Standard Maldivian: /ripoːtu/ ('report'). At one point, Maldivian did not have the phoneme /f/, and /p/ occurred in the language without contrastive aspiration. Some time in the 17th century, word initial and intervocalic /p/ changed to /f/. Historical documents from the 11th century, for example, show 'five' rendered as /pas/ whereas today it is pronounced /fas/.

In standard Maldivian when the phoneme /s/ occurs in the final position of a word it changes to [h] intervocalically when inflected. For example, /bas/ ('word' or 'language') becomes /bahek/ ('a word' or 'a language') and /mas/ ('fish') becomes /mahek/ ('a fish'). /s/ and /h/ still contrastive, though: initially /hiᵑɡaː/ ('operating') and /siᵑɡaː/ ('lion') and intervocalically /aharu/ ('year') and /asaru/ ('effect').

/ɽ/, a voiceless retroflex flap, is peculiar to Maldivian among the Indo-Aryan languages. But some people pronounce it as [ʐ] a retroflex grooved fricative.

Borrowed phonemes[]

Modern Standard Maldivian has borrowed many phonemes from Arabic. These phonemes are used exclusively in loan words from Arabic, for example, the phoneme /x/ in words such as /xaːdim/ ('male servant'). The following table shows the phonemes that have been borrowed from Arabic/Persian together with their transliteration into Tāna.

Tāna Arabic / Persian SAMT IPA
ޙ ح /ħ/
ޚ خ x /x/
ޜ ژ ʒ /ʒ/
ޢ ع /ʕ/
ޣ غ ġ /ɣ/
ޥ و w /w/
ޛ ذ ź /ð/
ޠ ط ţ /tˤ/
ޡ ظ /zˤ/
ޘ ث /θ/
ޤ ق q /q/
ޞ ص ş /sˤ/
ޟ ض /dˤ/

Phonotactics[]

Native Maldivian words do not allow initial consonant clusters; the syllable structure is (C)V(C) (i.e. one vowel with the option of a consonant in the onset and/or coda). This affects the introduction of loanwords, such as /is.kuːl/ from English school.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Gnanadesikan, Amalia E. (2017). Dhivehi: The Language of the Maldives. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 21–25.


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