Emphasis, glottalization and pharyngealization in Semitic and Afroasiatic

  • Fabio Gasparini Freie Universität Berlin

Abstract

This paper investigates the phenomenon of emphasis in Semitic from a phonological perspective. It is well known that Semitic emphatics can be realized either as ejectives (Ethiosemitic) or as pharyngealized consonants (Arabic). Recent interest in the Modern South Arabian languages revealed that the emphatics in this group can be realized through an interaction of glottalization and pharyngealization. Starting from a general assessment of glottalization from a cross–linguistic perspective, a focus on Semitic emphatics will be given by using data from the endangered Modern South Arabian language, Baṭḥari. Our goal is to provide a feature analysis of emphasis in Baṭḥari and to correlate it with the rest of Semitic, with special attention to the peculiar phonological patterning of the emphatic /ṭ/. This consonant appears to pattern in Baṭḥari together with the class of breathed consonants (Heselwood and Maghrabi 2015), probably due to its peculiar features. It will be shown that, by adopting Duanmu’s (2016) framework of phonological features, it is possible to provide a coherent model for the patterning of Baṭḥari and Modern South Arabian emphatics within Semitic. Furthermore, this paper will provide some tentative parallels between Semitic emphatics and glottalized segments found in the rest of Afroasiatic.

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Author Biography

Fabio Gasparini, Freie Universität Berlin

Fabio Gasparini received his PhD in African, Asian and Mediterranean Studies from the University of Naples “L’Orientale.” He currently holds a Postdoc position funded by Thyssen Stiftung at the Department of Semitic Studies of Freie Universität Berlin. His research focuses on the Modern South Arabian languages and Semitic in general from a comparative and typological perspective.

Fabio can be reached at: fabio.gasparini@fu-berlin.de

Published
2021-11-20
Section
Articles