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- Hawaiian_phonology abstract "This article is a linguistic description of the phonological system of Hawaiian based on documented experiences of the people who developed the Hawaiian alphabet during the 1820s and scholarly research on the Hawaiian language conducted by lexicographers and linguists from 1949 to present.Hawaiian is known for having very few consonant phonemes — only eight: /p, k ~ t, ʔ, h, m, n, l ~ n, w ~ v/. There is allophonic variation of [k] with [t], [w] with [v], and [l] with [n]. The [t]–[k] variation is highly unusual among the world's languages.Hawaiian has either 5 or 25 vowel phonemes, depending on how long vowels and diphthongs are analyzed. If the long vowels and diphthongs are treated as two-phoneme sequences,then the total of vowel phonemes is five. But if the long vowels and diphthongs are treated as separate, unit phonemes, then the total of vowel phonemes is 25. The short vowel phonemes are/u, i, o, e, a/. If long vowels are counted separately, they are /uː, iː, oː, eː, aː/. If diphthongs are counted separately, they are /iu, ou, oi, eu, ei, au, ai, ao, ae, oːu, eːi, aːu, aːi, aːo, aːe/. There is some allophonic variation of the vowels, but it is nowhere near as dramatic as that of the consonants.Hawaiian syllable structure is (C)V(V) where C is any consonant and V is any vowel. Double vowels (VV) may be long vowels or diphthongs. All CV(V) syllables occur except for wū; wu occurs only in two words borrowed from English. Word stress is predictable in words of one to four syllables, but not in words of five or more syllables. Phonological processes in Hawaiian include palatalization and deletion of consonants, and the raising, diphthongization, deletion, and compensatory lengthening of vowels. Phonological reduction (or "decay") of consonant phonemes during the historical development of Hawaiian has resulted in the phonemic glottal stop. Ultimate loss (deletion) of intervocalic consonant phonemes has resulted in long vowels and diphthongs.".
- Hawaiian_phonology wikiPageID "6143488".
- Hawaiian_phonology wikiPageRevisionID "596278787".
- Hawaiian_phonology hasPhotoCollection Hawaiian_phonology.
- Hawaiian_phonology subject Category:Hawaiian_language.
- Hawaiian_phonology subject Category:Language_phonologies.
- Hawaiian_phonology type Abstraction100002137.
- Hawaiian_phonology type Cognition100023271.
- Hawaiian_phonology type Content105809192.
- Hawaiian_phonology type DescriptiveLinguistics106181584.
- Hawaiian_phonology type Discipline105996646.
- Hawaiian_phonology type KnowledgeDomain105999266.
- Hawaiian_phonology type LanguagePhonologies.
- Hawaiian_phonology type Linguistics106172789.
- Hawaiian_phonology type Phonology106177450.
- Hawaiian_phonology type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Hawaiian_phonology type Science105999797.
- Hawaiian_phonology comment "This article is a linguistic description of the phonological system of Hawaiian based on documented experiences of the people who developed the Hawaiian alphabet during the 1820s and scholarly research on the Hawaiian language conducted by lexicographers and linguists from 1949 to present.Hawaiian is known for having very few consonant phonemes — only eight: /p, k ~ t, ʔ, h, m, n, l ~ n, w ~ v/. There is allophonic variation of [k] with [t], [w] with [v], and [l] with [n].".
- Hawaiian_phonology label "Hawaiian phonology".
- Hawaiian_phonology sameAs m.0fsdy3.
- Hawaiian_phonology sameAs Q16983506.
- Hawaiian_phonology sameAs Q16983506.
- Hawaiian_phonology sameAs Hawaiian_phonology.
- Hawaiian_phonology wasDerivedFrom Hawaiian_phonology?oldid=596278787.
- Hawaiian_phonology isPrimaryTopicOf Hawaiian_phonology.