Tagalog_phonology

Tagalog phonology

Tagalog phonology

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This article deals with current phonology and phonetics and with historical developments of the phonology of the Tagalog language, including variants.

Tagalog has allophones, so it is important here to distinguish phonemes (written in slashes / /) and corresponding allophones (written in brackets [ ]).

Consonants

More information Bilabial, Dental/ Alveolar ...
More information Stops, Fricatives ...

Vowels and semivowels

More information Front, Back ...
More information Vowels, Semivowels and/or Semiconsonants ...

Stress and final glottal stop

Stress is a distinctive feature in Tagalog. Primary stress occurs on either the final or the penultimate syllable of a word. Vowel lengthening accompanies primary or secondary stress except when stress occurs at the end of a word.

Tagalog words are often distinguished from one another by the position of the stress and/or the presence of a final glottal stop. In formal or academic settings, stress placement and the glottal stop are indicated by a diacritic (tuldík) above the final vowel. The penultimate primary stress position (malumay) is the default stress type and so is left unwritten except in dictionaries. The name of each stress type has its corresponding diacritic in the final vowel.[2]

More information Common spelling, Unstressed ultimate syllable no diacritic ...

See also


References

  1. Schachter, Paul; Otanes, Fe T. (1972). Tagalog Reference Grammar. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-04943-8. LCCN 73-122946.
  2. Himmelmann, Nikolaus (2005). "Tagalog". In Adelaar, K. Alexander; Himmelmann, Nikolaus (eds.). The Austronesian languages of Asia and Madagascar. London: Routledge. pp. 350–376. ISBN 9780700712861.

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