[Histling-l] histling-l Digest, Vol 5, Issue 7

Lameen Souag lameen at gmail.com
Fri Sep 15 05:36:37 EDT 2017


Excrescence seems to be rather atypical in Semitic, but Cypriot Maronite
Arabic offers a number of examples.  For instance, the clusters *ms, *mš,
*mx, *mr, *ml are phonotactically unacceptable and are regularly replaced
by mps, mpš, mpx, mpr, mbl.  Synchronically, this yields regular
alternations like míšek "he walked" + -t > mpšaxt "I walked", or ʔáxmar
"red" + -a > xámpra "red"; diachronically, it regularly yields forms like
Classical Arabic qamħ "wheat" > kampx, or 'ams "yesterday" > ʔimps.  (All
examples from Maria Tsiapera's _A Descriptive Analysis of Cypriot Maronite
Arabic_, for convenience since I have it on my shelf, but more details can
be found in Alexander Borg's works.)

Lameen Souag
LACITO, CNRS

On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 6:11 PM, <histling-l-request at mailman.yale.edu>
wrote:

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>    1. Re: histling-l Digest, Vol 5, Issue 3 (Emily Gasser)
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> Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2017 12:10:12 -0400
> From: Emily Gasser <egasser1 at swarthmore.edu>
> Subject: Re: [Histling-l] histling-l Digest, Vol 5, Issue 3
> To: histling-l at mailman.yale.edu
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> According to Wilco van den Heuvel's (2006) dissertation, Biak
> (Austronesian, NW New Guinea) inserts a [b] into /mr/ clusters and a [d]
> into /nr/ clusters (the latter only in major word classes). So for example
> PMP *malip 'to laugh' -> *mbrif*, with regular historical deletion of the
> initial syllable's *a. Apparently this is a synchronically active
> phonological process: the intrusive consonants are inserted when the
> illegal clusters are created over a morpheme boundary, and disappear when
> reduplication breaks up a cluster that's present in a monomorphemic form (
> *mbra?n* 'walk' -> *mara?ndan*, probably from *ma- plus PMP *zalan).
> -Emily Gasser
>
> On Wed, Sep 13, 2017 at 2:46 PM, <histling-l-request at mailman.yale.edu>
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> >    1. Re: histling-l Digest, Vol 5, Issue 2 (Silvia Luraghi)
> >    2. excrescence by regular rule? (Martha Ratliff)
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> > Message: 1
> > Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2017 19:51:08 +0200
> > From: Silvia Luraghi <silvia.luraghi at unipv.it>
> > Subject: Re: [Histling-l] histling-l Digest, Vol 5, Issue 2
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> > Il 13/set/2017 18:06, <histling-l-request at mailman.yale.edu> ha scritto:
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> > >    1. Fwd: postdoc opportunity at SOAS, University of London in
> > >       Tibeto-Burman linguistics (Nathan Hill)
> > >
> > >
> > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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> > > Message: 1
> > > Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2017 22:51:12 +0000
> > > From: Nathan Hill <nh36 at soas.ac.uk>
> > > Subject: [Histling-l] Fwd: postdoc opportunity at SOAS, University of
> > >         London in Tibeto-Burman linguistics
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> > > Message-ID:
> > >         <CAL0JhP_KFiJbdAM0kwPVRzmRpON96v0yLf8-
> > > Z0gE4-dFZbvQHQ at mail.gmail.com>
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> > > Dear Colleagues,
> > >
> > > Please help me to circulate this postdoc advertisement for a historical
> > > linguistics position at SOAS, University of London.
> > >
> > > best,
> > > Nathan
> > > ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> > >
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> > > soas.ac.uk_fe_tpl-5Fsoasnet01.asp-3Fs-3D4A515F4E5A565B1A-
> > > 26jobid-3D69181&d=DwIFaQ&c=cjytLXgP8ixuoHflwc-poQ&r=
> > > xWgwnXzyLjTDtEN1jkc-sliD_cd49k7fc7XSMi_8aeo&m=
> > > 2lxpk2FWg6AWVWaOXO6WkAeQujyfwOKwU3ewuwG-gOo&s=
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> > > BkB373xNRL2wiVj0&e= ,
> > > 2223124882&key=27466865&c=341502865436&pagestamp=sefvgonybbbujusbew
> > >
> > > Job Details
> > > Post-Doctoral Research Assistant
> > >
> > >
> > > Vacancy Number 001349
> > > Location London
> > > Campus Russell Square
> > > Post Class Research
> > > Department / Centre Department of the Languages and Cultures of China
> and
> > > Inner Asia
> > > Contract Type Fixed Term
> > > Closing date for applications 12 October 2017
> > >
> > >
> > > *Salary Range - ?35,775 - ?42,060 per annum inclusive of London
> > Allowance*
> > > *Full time (35 hours per week ? 1.0 FTE) *
> > >
> > > *This post is fixed-term until 31 August 2020 in principle, subject to
> > the
> > > availability of funds. The post is only guaranteed until 31 August 2018
> > in
> > > the first instance.*
> > >
> > >
> > > *The role and its responsibilities*
> > >
> > > The Post-Doctoral Research Assistant will work closely with the
> Principal
> > > Investigator on collaborative research projects and publications using
> > > philological, comparative, and computational approaches to the
> languages
> > > and linguistics of the Sino-Tibetan family, and will support the
> broader
> > > aims and activities of the research project as a whole.
> > >
> > > A high degree of computer literacy, ideally including knowledge of one
> or
> > > more programming languages, is required. The appointee will have a high
> > > degree of self-motivation and a demonstrable pride in the quality of
> > > written work and research previously undertaken. The ability to keep
> > > careful records and referencing is essential.
> > >
> > > *Skills and experience*
> > >
> > > PhD in linguistics or other relevant discipline, with a strong
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> > > in historical linguistics and the comparative method (such as in
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> > more
> > > computer language (in particular Python or Javascript) and knowledge of
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> > > experience in working with a Sino-Tibetan language are highly
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> > > The applicant should have the ability to synthesise complex arguments
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> > >
> > > *Further information*
> > >
> > > For an informal discussion regarding the role, please contact Dr Nathan
> > W.
> > > Hill, nh36 at soas.ac.uk or 020 7898 4512
> > >
> > > *Competitive benefits package*
> > >
> > > As an employer of choice SOAS offers an extensive benefits package
> > > including:
> > > ? 30 days holiday plus bank holidays and additional School closure days
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> > > ? Pension scheme with generous employer contribution
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> > > *About the School of East Asian Languages and Cultures*
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> > > If you are interested in applying for this vacancy, please complete the
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> > > Description and Person Specification, along with a full list of duties
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> > be
> > > considered.*
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> > > *Interviews will provisionally be held in the week commencing 30
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> > > If you have any questions or require any assistance with regard to the
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> > >
> > > *At SOAS we celebrate diversity and promote equality and inclusion
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> > Message: 2
> > Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2017 18:46:26 +0000
> > From: Martha Ratliff <ac6000 at wayne.edu>
> > Subject: [Histling-l] excrescence by regular rule?
> > To: "histling-l at mailman.yale.edu" <histling-l at mailman.yale.edu>
> > Cc: Martha Ratliff <ac6000 at wayne.edu>
> > Message-ID: <1CCFE245-EE5C-4953-8381-CCB1CDDE99BA at wayne.edu>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"
> >
> > Does anyone know of a reconstruction in which someone has posited a
> > regular change involving insertion of a consonant between two other
> > consonants?  I had always thought of excrescence as a sound change that
> > operates on individual words in an unpredictable fashion (that is, the
> > low-level transitional consonant is phonologized unpredictably), but am
> > wondering if there are cases where someone believes it to have operated
> in
> > a regular, rule-governed fashion to an entire set of words.
> > I am especially interested in insertions of the ?thimble?/?hombre? type,
> > but would be interested in examples of the ?Hampshire? type as well.
> > Many thanks in advance!
> > Martha Ratliff
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>
> --
> Visiting Assistant Professor
> Department of Linguistics
> Swarthmore College
> emilygasser.wordpress.com
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