Affiliation:
1. SIL International
2. Yunnan Normal University
3. University College London
Abstract
Abstract
Ground-breaking studies on how Bangkok Thai tones have changed over the past 100 years (Pittayaporn 2007, 2018; Zhu et al. 2015) reveal a pattern that Zhu et al. (2015) term the
“clockwise tone shift cycle:” low > falling > high level or rising-falling > rising > falling-rising or low. The
present study addresses three follow-up questions: (1) Are tone changes like those seen in Bangkok Thai also attested in other
languages? (2) What other tone changes are repeated across multiple languages? (3) What phonetic biases are most likely to be the
origins of the reported changes? A typological review of 52 tone change studies across 45 Sinitic, Tai-Kadai, Hmong-Mien, and
Tibeto-Burman languages reveals that clockwise changes are by far the most common. The paper concludes by exploring how tonal
truncation (Xu 2017) generates synchronic variation that matches the diachronic
patterns; this suggests that truncation is a key mechanism in tone change.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
8 articles.
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