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In linguistics, apophony (also known as ablaut, (vowel) gradation, (vowel) mutation, alternation, internal modification, stem modification, stem alternation, replacive morphology, stem mutation, or internal inflection) is an alternation of vowel (quality) within a word that indicates grammatical information (often inflectional).
Description
Apophony is exemplified in English as the internal vowel alternations that produce such related words as
- sing, sang, sung, song
- bind, bound
- blood, bleed
- brood, breed
- doom, deem
- food, feed
- lie, lay
- rise, rose, risen
- weave, wove
- foot, feet
- goose, geese
- tooth, teeth
The difference in these vowels marks variously a difference in tense or aspect (e.g. sing/sang/sung), transitivity (rise/raise), part of speech (sing/song), or grammatical number (goose/geese).
That these sound alternations function grammatically can be seen as they are often equivalent to grammatical suffixes (an external modification). Compare the following:
Present tense | Past tense |
---|---|
jump | jumped |
sing | sang |
Singular | Plural |
book | books |
goose | geese |
The vowel alternation between i and a indicates a difference between present and past tense in the pair sing/sang. Here the past tense is indicated by the vowel a just as the past tense is indicated on the verb jump with the past tense suffix -ed. Likewise, the plural suffix -s on the word books has the same grammatical function as the presence of the vowel ee in the word geese (where ee alternates with oo in the pair goose/geese).
Consonants, too, can alternate in ways that are used grammatically. An example is the pattern in English of verb-noun pairs with related meanings but differing in voicing of a postvocalic consonant:
Verb voiced | Noun unvoiced |
---|---|
advise | advice |
believe | belief |
breathe (phonetically: /briːð/) | breath (phonetically: /brɛθ/) |
give | gift |
house (phonetically: /haʊz/) | house (phonetically: /haʊs/) |
live | life |
rive | rift |
use (phonetically: /juːz/) | use (phonetically: /juːs/) |
weave | weft |
wreathe (phonetically: /riːð/) | wreath (phonetically: /riːθ/) |
Most instances of apophony develop historically from changes due to phonological assimilation that are later grammaticalized (or morphologized) when the environment causing the assimilation is lost. Such is the case with English goose/geese and breath/breathe.
Types
Apophony may involve various types of alternations, including vowels, consonants, prosodic elements (such as tone, syllable length), and even smaller features, such as nasality (on vowels).
The sound alternations may be used inflectionally or derivationally. The particular function of a given alternation will depend on the language.
Vowel gradation
Apophony often involves vowels. Indo-European ablaut (English sing-sang) and Germanic umlaut (goose-geese), mentioned above, are well attested examples. Another example is from Dinka:
Singular | Plural | Gloss | Vowel alternation |
---|---|---|---|
dom | dum | 'field/fields' | (o-u) |
kat | kɛt | 'frame/frames' | (a-ɛ) |
The vowel alternation may involve more than just a change in vowel quality. In Athabaskan languages, such as Navajo, verbs have series of stems where the vowel alternates (sometimes with an added suffix) indicating a different tense-aspect. Navajo vowel ablaut, depending on the verb, may be a change in vowel, vowel length, nasality, and/or tone. For example, the verb stem kaah/-ką́ 'to handle an open container' has a total of 16 combinations of the 5 modes and 4 aspects, resulting in 7 different verb stem forms (i.e. -kaah, -kááh, -kaał, -kááł, -ka’, -ká, -ką́).
Imperfective | Perfective | Progressive- future | Usitative- iterative | Optative | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Momentaneous | kaah | ką́ | kááł | kááh | kááł |
Continuative | ká | ką́ | kaał | kaah | kaał |
Distributive | ka’ | ką́ | kaał | kaah | ka’ |
Conative | kááh | - | - | - | - |
Another verb stem | -géésh/-gizh 'to cut' has a different set of alternations and mode-aspect combinations, resulting in 3 different forms (i.e. -géésh, -gizh, -gish):
Imperfective | Perfective | Progressive- future | Usitative- iterative | Optative | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Momentaneous | géésh | gizh | gish | gish | géésh |
Continuative | gizh | gizh | gish | gish | gizh |
Semelfactive | gish | gish | gish | gish | gish/géésh |
Prosodic apophony
Various prosodic elements, such as tone, syllable length, and stress, may be found in alternations. For example, Vietnamese has the following tone alternations which are used derivationally:
tone alternation | ||
---|---|---|
đây 'here' | đấy 'there' | (ngang tone–sắc tone) |
bây giờ 'now' | bấy giờ 'then' | (ngang tone–sắc tone) |
kia 'there' | kìa 'yonder' | (ngang tone–huyền tone) |
cứng 'hard' | cửng '(to) have an erection' | (sắc tone–hỏi tone) |
Albanian uses different vowel lengths to indicate number and grammatical gender on nouns:
[ɡuːr] "stone" | [ɡur] "stones" |
[dy] "two (masculine)" | [dyː] "two (feminine)" |
English has alternating stress patterns that indicate whether related words are nouns (first syllable stressed) or verbs (second syllable stressed). This tends to be the case with words in English that came from Latin:[citation needed]
noun | verb |
---|---|
cóntrast | contrást |
cónvict | convíct |
ínsult | insúlt |
óbject | objéct |
pérmit | permít |
pérvert | pervért |
récord | recórd |
súbject | subjéct |
Prosodic alternations are sometimes analyzed as not as a type of apophony but rather as prosodic affixes, which are known, variously, as suprafixes, superfixes, or simulfixes.
Consonant apophony
Consonant alternation is commonly known as consonant mutation or consonant gradation. Bemba indicates causative verbs through alternation of the stem-final consonant. Here the alternation involves spirantization and palatalization:
Intransitive verb | Causative verb |
---|---|
luba 'to be lost' | lufya 'to cause to be lost' |
koma 'to be deaf' | komya 'to cause to be deaf' |
pona 'to fall' | ponya 'to cause to fall' |
enda 'to walk' | endesha 'to cause to walk' |
lunga 'to hunt' | lunsha 'to cause to hunt' |
kula 'to grow' | kusha 'to cause to grow' |
Celtic languages are well known for their initial consonant mutations.
Indo-European linguistics
Indo-European ablaut
In Indo-European linguistics, ablaut is the vowel alternation that produces such related words as sing, sang, sung, and song. The difference in the vowels results from the alternation (in the Proto-Indo-European language) of the vowel e with the vowel o or with no vowel.
To cite a few other examples of Indo-European ablaut, English has a certain class of verbs, called strong verbs, in which the vowel changes to indicate a different grammatical tense-aspect.
Imperative | Preterite | Past participle | Vowel alternation |
---|---|---|---|
swim | swam | swum | (i-a-u) phonetically: /ɪ-æ-ʌ/ |
fall | fell | fallen | (a-e-a) phonetically: /ɔː-ɛ-ɔː/ |
drive | drove | driven | (i-o-i) phonetically: /aɪ-oʊ-ɪ/ |
As the examples above show, a change in the vowel of the verb stem creates a different verb form. Some of the verbs also have a suffix in the past participle form.
Umlaut
In Indo-European linguistics, umlaut is the vowel fronting that produces such related words as foot > feet or strong > strength. The difference in the vowels results from the influence of an /i/, /iː/ or /j/ (which in most cases has since been lost) at the end of the word causing the stem vowel to be pulled forward. Some weak verbs show umlaut in the present tense, with the past tense representing the original vowel: bought > buy (/ɔː/>/aɪ/). Hundreds of similar examples can be found in English, German, Dutch and other languages.
Germanic a-mutation is a process analogous to umlaut, but involving the influence of a low vowel such as /ɑ/ causing a high vowel in the stem to lower.
Ablaut versus umlaut
In Indo-European historical linguistics the terms ablaut and umlaut refer to different phenomena and are not interchangeable. Ablaut is a process that dates back to Proto-Indo-European times, occurs in all Indo-European languages, and refers to (phonologically) unpredictable vowel alternations of a specific nature. From an Indo-European perspective, it typically appears as a variation between o, e, and no vowel, although various sound changes result in different vowel alternations appearing in different daughter languages. Umlaut, meanwhile, is a process that is particular to the Germanic languages and refers to a variation between back vowels and front vowels that was originally phonologically predictable, and was caused by the presence of an /i/ or /j/ in the syllable following the modified vowel.
From a diachronic (historical) perspective, the distinction between ablaut and umlaut is very important, particularly in the Germanic languages, as it indicates where and how a specific vowel alternation originates. It is also important when taking a synchronic (descriptive) perspective on old Germanic languages such as Old English, as umlaut was still a very regular and productive process at the time. When taking a synchronic perspective on modern languages, however, both processes appear very similar. For example, the alternations seen in sing/sang/sung and foot/feet both appear to be morphologically conditioned (e.g. the alternation appears in the plural or past tense, but not the singular or present tense) and phonologically unpredictable.
By analogy, descriptive linguists discussing synchronic grammars sometimes employ the terms ablaut and umlaut, using ablaut to refer to morphological vowel alternation generally (which is unpredictable phonologically) and umlaut to refer to any type of regressive vowel harmony (which is phonologically predictable). Ambiguity can be avoided by using alternative terms (apophony, gradation, alternation, internal modification for ablaut; vowel harmony for umlaut) for the broader sense of the words.
Stem alternations and other morphological processes
Stem modifications (i.e. apophony) may co-occur with other morphological processes, such as affixation. An example of this is in the formation of plural nouns in German:
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
Buch 'book' | Bücher 'books' |
Haus 'house' | Häuser 'houses' |
Here the singular/plural distinction is indicated through umlaut and additionally by a suffix -er in the plural form. English also displays similar forms with a -ren suffix in the plural and a -en suffix in the past participle forms along with the internal vowel alternation:
child (singular) /tʃaɪld/ | children (plural) /ˈtʃɪldrən/ |
drive (imperative) /draɪv/ | driven (past participle) /ˈdrɪvən/ |
Chechen features this as well:
Singular | Plural |
---|---|
лам lam 'mountain' | лаьмнаш lämnaš 'mountains' |
мотт mott 'language' | меттанаш mettanaš 'languages' |
A more complicated example comes from Chickasaw where the positive/negative distinction in verbs displays vowel ablaut along with prefixation (ak-) and infixation (-'-):
Positive | Negative |
---|---|
hilhali 'I'm dancing' | akhi'lho 'I'm not dancing' |
Transfixation
The nonconcatenative morphology of the Afroasiatic languages is sometimes described in terms of apophony. The alternation patterns in many of these languages is quite extensive involving vowels and consonant gemination (i.e. doubled consonants). The alternations below are of Modern Standard Arabic, based on the root k–t–b 'write' (the symbol ⟨ː⟩ indicates gemination on the preceding consonant):
Word | Gloss | Alternation pattern |
---|---|---|
kataba | 'he wrote' | (a - a - a) |
kutiba | 'it was written' | (u - i - a) |
yaktubu | 'he writes' | (ya - ∅ - u - u) |
yuktabu | 'it is written' | (yu - ∅ - a - u) |
kaatib | 'writing (active participle); writer' | (aa - i) |
kuttaab | 'writers' | (u - ːaa) |
maktuub | 'written' | (ma - ∅ - uu) |
kitaabah | '(act of) writing' | (i - aa - ah) |
kitaab | 'book' | (i - aa) |
kutub | 'books' | (u - u) |
kaataba | 'he corresponded with' | (aa - a - a) |
kattaba | 'he caused to write' | (a - ːa - a) |
kuttiba | 'he was caused to write' | (u - ːi - a) |
Other analyses of these languages consider the patterns not to be sound alternations, but rather discontinuous roots with discontinuous affixes, known as transfixes (sometimes considered simulfixes or suprafixes). Some theoretical perspectives call up the notion of morphological templates or morpheme "skeletons".
It would also be possible to analyze English in this way as well, where the alternation of goose/geese could be explained as a basic discontinuous root g-se that is filled out with an infix -oo- "(singular)" or -ee- "(plural)". Many would consider this type of analysis for English to be less desirable as this type of infixal morphology is not very prevalent throughout English and the morphemes -oo- and -ee- would be exceedingly rare.
Replacive morphemes
Another analytical perspective on sound alternations treats the phenomena not as merely alternation but rather a "replacive" morpheme that replaces part of a word. In this analysis, the alternation between goose/geese may be thought of as goose being the basic form where -ee- is a replacive morpheme that is substituted for oo.
- goose → g-ee-se
This usage of the term morpheme (which is actually describing a replacement process, and not a true morpheme), however, is more in keeping with Item-and-Process models of morphology instead of Item-and-Arrangement models.
Ablaut-motivated compounding
Ablaut reduplication, or ablaut-motivated compounding, is a type of word formation of "expressives" (such as onomatopoeia or ideophones), in which words are formed by reduplication of a base and alternation of the internal vowel.
The pattern of vowel alternation in English follows a front to back vowel order, which among clipped vowels means a subset of /ɪ/ > /ɛ/ > /æ/ > /ʌ/ > /ɒ/ > /ʊ/, as in:
- bing-bang-boom
- bish-bash-bosh
- criss-cross
- shilly-shally
- snip-snap
- splish-splash
- tic-tac-toe
- tick-tock
- ticky-tacky
- wishy-washy
- zig-zag
And partially in eeny, meeny, miny, moe.
In many Turkic languages the vowel pattern is low to high, as in Turkish çak-çuk (which follows the English patten) and fan-fin (which contravenes it).
Examples from Japanese include:
- gata-goto 'rattle'
- kasa-koso 'rustle'
Examples from Chinese include:
- 叽里咕噜 (jīligūlū, 'babbling')
- 噼里啪啦 (pīlipālā, 'splashing')
Some languages do not appear to have a preferred order, for example Mongolian with both pay-puy and puy-pay.
See also
- Alternation (linguistics)
- Consonant mutation
- Metaphony
- Morphology (linguistics)
- Nonconcatenative morphology
- References for ablaut
References
- Bauer, Laurie (2003). Introducing linguistic morphology. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press. p. 35. ISBN 9780878403431.
- (Nguyễn 1997:42-44)
- (Asher 1994:1719)
- (Kula 2000:174)
- See, for example, "Semitic apophony" on pp. 67-72 of Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2003), Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9781403917232 / ISBN 9781403938695 [1]
- Ido, Shinji. 2009. "Vowel alternation in disyllabic reduplicatives" Poster presented at the International Conference on Minority Languages XII. University of Tartu.
- Ido, Shinji. 2011. "Vowel alternation in disyllabic reduplicatives: An areal dimension" Eesti ja Soome-Ugri Keeleteaduse Ajakiri (Journal of Estonian and Finno-Ugric Linguistics). 2 (1): 185–193.
- Ido, Shinji. 2009. "Divanü Lügati't-Türk'teki Yansımalı Kelimelerde Ünlü Nöbetleşmesi" Akademik Araştırmalar Dergisi (Journal of Academic Studies). 10 (39): 263-272.
Bibliography
- Anderson, Stephen R. (1985). Inflectional morphology. In T. Shopen (Ed.), Language typology and syntactic description: Grammatical categories and the lexicon (Vol. 3, pp. 150–201). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Especially section 1.3 "Stem modifications").
- Asher, R. E. (Ed.). (1994). The Encyclopedia of language and linguistics. Oxford: Pergamon Press. ISBN 0-08-035943-4.
- Bauer, Laurie. (2004). A glossary of morphology. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
- Hamano, Shoko. (1998). The Sound-Symbolic System of Japanese. CSLI Publications,Stanford.
- Haspelmath, Martin. (2002). Understanding morphology. London: Arnold.
- Kula, Nancy C. (2000). The phonology/morphology interface: Consonant mutations in Bemba. In H. de Hoop & T. van der Wouden (Eds.), Linguistics in the Netherlands 2000 (pp. 171–183). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
- Nguyễn, Đình-Hoà. (1997). Vietnamese: Tiếng Việt không son phấn. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company. ISBN 1-55619-733-0.
- Sapir, Edward. (1921). Language: An introduction to the study of speech. New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co.
- Spencer, Andrew; & Zwicky, Arnold M. (Eds.). (1998). The handbook of morphology. Oxford: Blackwell.
- Young, Robert W., & Morgan, William Sr. (1987). The Navajo language: A grammar and colloquial dictionary (rev. ed.). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-8263-1014-1.
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Apophony news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message In linguistics apophony also known as ablaut vowel gradation vowel mutation alternation internal modification stem modification stem alternation replacive morphology stem mutation or internal inflection is an alternation of vowel quality within a word that indicates grammatical information often inflectional DescriptionApophony is exemplified in English as the internal vowel alternations that produce such related words as sing sang sung song bind bound blood bleed brood breed doom deem food feed lie lay rise rose risen weave wove foot feet goose geese tooth teeth The difference in these vowels marks variously a difference in tense or aspect e g sing sang sung transitivity rise raise part of speech sing song or grammatical number goose geese That these sound alternations function grammatically can be seen as they are often equivalent to grammatical suffixes an external modification Compare the following Present tense Past tensejump jumpedsing sangSingular Pluralbook booksgoose geese The vowel alternation between i and a indicates a difference between present and past tense in the pair sing sang Here the past tense is indicated by the vowel a just as the past tense is indicated on the verb jump with the past tense suffix ed Likewise the plural suffix s on the word books has the same grammatical function as the presence of the vowel ee in the word geese where ee alternates with oo in the pair goose geese Consonants too can alternate in ways that are used grammatically An example is the pattern in English of verb noun pairs with related meanings but differing in voicing of a postvocalic consonant Verb voiced Noun unvoicedadvise advicebelieve beliefbreathe phonetically b r iː d breath phonetically b r ɛ 8 give gifthouse phonetically h aʊ z house phonetically h aʊ s live liferive riftuse phonetically j uː z use phonetically j uː s weave weftwreathe phonetically r iː d wreath phonetically r iː 8 Most instances of apophony develop historically from changes due to phonological assimilation that are later grammaticalized or morphologized when the environment causing the assimilation is lost Such is the case with English goose geese and breath breathe TypesApophony may involve various types of alternations including vowels consonants prosodic elements such as tone syllable length and even smaller features such as nasality on vowels The sound alternations may be used inflectionally or derivationally The particular function of a given alternation will depend on the language Vowel gradation Apophony often involves vowels Indo European ablaut English sing sang and Germanic umlaut goose geese mentioned above are well attested examples Another example is from Dinka Singular Plural Gloss Vowel alternationdom dum field fields o u kat kɛt frame frames a ɛ The vowel alternation may involve more than just a change in vowel quality In Athabaskan languages such as Navajo verbs have series of stems where the vowel alternates sometimes with an added suffix indicating a different tense aspect Navajo vowel ablaut depending on the verb may be a change in vowel vowel length nasality and or tone For example the verb stem kaah ka to handle an open container has a total of 16 combinations of the 5 modes and 4 aspects resulting in 7 different verb stem forms i e kaah kaah kaal kaal ka ka ka Imperfective Perfective Progressive future Usitative iterative OptativeMomentaneous kaah ka kaal kaah kaalContinuative ka ka kaal kaah kaalDistributive ka ka kaal kaah ka Conative kaah Another verb stem geesh gizh to cut has a different set of alternations and mode aspect combinations resulting in 3 different forms i e geesh gizh gish Imperfective Perfective Progressive future Usitative iterative OptativeMomentaneous geesh gizh gish gish geeshContinuative gizh gizh gish gish gizhSemelfactive gish gish gish gish gish geeshProsodic apophony Various prosodic elements such as tone syllable length and stress may be found in alternations For example Vietnamese has the following tone alternations which are used derivationally tone alternationđay here đấy there ngang tone sắc tone bay giờ now bấy giờ then ngang tone sắc tone kia there kia yonder ngang tone huyền tone cứng hard cửng to have an erection sắc tone hỏi tone Albanian uses different vowel lengths to indicate number and grammatical gender on nouns ɡuːr stone ɡur stones dy two masculine dyː two feminine English has alternating stress patterns that indicate whether related words are nouns first syllable stressed or verbs second syllable stressed This tends to be the case with words in English that came from Latin citation needed noun verbcontrast contrastconvict convictinsult insultobject objectpermit permitpervert pervertrecord recordsubject subject Prosodic alternations are sometimes analyzed as not as a type of apophony but rather as prosodic affixes which are known variously as suprafixes superfixes or simulfixes Consonant apophony Consonant alternation is commonly known as consonant mutation or consonant gradation Bemba indicates causative verbs through alternation of the stem final consonant Here the alternation involves spirantization and palatalization Intransitive verb Causative verbluba to be lost lufya to cause to be lost koma to be deaf komya to cause to be deaf pona to fall ponya to cause to fall enda to walk endesha to cause to walk lunga to hunt lunsha to cause to hunt kula to grow kusha to cause to grow Celtic languages are well known for their initial consonant mutations Indo European linguisticsIndo European ablaut In Indo European linguistics ablaut is the vowel alternation that produces such related words as sing sang sung and song The difference in the vowels results from the alternation in the Proto Indo European language of the vowel e with the vowel o or with no vowel To cite a few other examples of Indo European ablaut English has a certain class of verbs called strong verbs in which the vowel changes to indicate a different grammatical tense aspect Imperative Preterite Past participle Vowel alternationswim swam swum i a u phonetically ɪ ae ʌ fall fell fallen a e a phonetically ɔː ɛ ɔː drive drove driven i o i phonetically aɪ oʊ ɪ As the examples above show a change in the vowel of the verb stem creates a different verb form Some of the verbs also have a suffix in the past participle form Umlaut In Indo European linguistics umlaut is the vowel fronting that produces such related words as foot gt feet or strong gt strength The difference in the vowels results from the influence of an i iː or j which in most cases has since been lost at the end of the word causing the stem vowel to be pulled forward Some weak verbs show umlaut in the present tense with the past tense representing the original vowel bought gt buy ɔː gt aɪ Hundreds of similar examples can be found in English German Dutch and other languages Germanic a mutation is a process analogous to umlaut but involving the influence of a low vowel such as ɑ causing a high vowel in the stem to lower Ablaut versus umlaut In Indo European historical linguistics the terms ablaut and umlaut refer to different phenomena and are not interchangeable Ablaut is a process that dates back to Proto Indo European times occurs in all Indo European languages and refers to phonologically unpredictable vowel alternations of a specific nature From an Indo European perspective it typically appears as a variation between o e and no vowel although various sound changes result in different vowel alternations appearing in different daughter languages Umlaut meanwhile is a process that is particular to the Germanic languages and refers to a variation between back vowels and front vowels that was originally phonologically predictable and was caused by the presence of an i or j in the syllable following the modified vowel From a diachronic historical perspective the distinction between ablaut and umlaut is very important particularly in the Germanic languages as it indicates where and how a specific vowel alternation originates It is also important when taking a synchronic descriptive perspective on old Germanic languages such as Old English as umlaut was still a very regular and productive process at the time When taking a synchronic perspective on modern languages however both processes appear very similar For example the alternations seen in sing sang sung and foot feet both appear to be morphologically conditioned e g the alternation appears in the plural or past tense but not the singular or present tense and phonologically unpredictable By analogy descriptive linguists discussing synchronic grammars sometimes employ the terms ablaut and umlaut using ablaut to refer to morphological vowel alternation generally which is unpredictable phonologically and umlaut to refer to any type of regressive vowel harmony which is phonologically predictable Ambiguity can be avoided by using alternative terms apophony gradation alternation internal modification for ablaut vowel harmony for umlaut for the broader sense of the words Stem alternations and other morphological processesStem modifications i e apophony may co occur with other morphological processes such as affixation An example of this is in the formation of plural nouns in German Singular PluralBuch book Bucher books Haus house Hauser houses Here the singular plural distinction is indicated through umlaut and additionally by a suffix er in the plural form English also displays similar forms with a ren suffix in the plural and a en suffix in the past participle forms along with the internal vowel alternation child singular tʃ aɪ l d children plural ˈ tʃ ɪ l d r en drive imperative d r aɪ v driven past participle ˈ d r ɪ v en Chechen features this as well Singular Plurallam lam mountain lamnash lamnas mountains mott mott language mettanash mettanas languages A more complicated example comes from Chickasaw where the positive negative distinction in verbs displays vowel ablaut along with prefixation ak and infixation Positive Negativehilhali I m dancing akhi lho I m not dancing TransfixationThe nonconcatenative morphology of the Afroasiatic languages is sometimes described in terms of apophony The alternation patterns in many of these languages is quite extensive involving vowels and consonant gemination i e doubled consonants The alternations below are of Modern Standard Arabic based on the root k t b write the symbol ː indicates gemination on the preceding consonant Word Gloss Alternation patternkataba he wrote a a a kutiba it was written u i a yaktubu he writes ya u u yuktabu it is written yu a u kaatib writing active participle writer aa i kuttaab writers u ːaa maktuub written ma uu kitaabah act of writing i aa ah kitaab book i aa kutub books u u kaataba he corresponded with aa a a kattaba he caused to write a ːa a kuttiba he was caused to write u ːi a A diagram of an autosegmental representation of the Arabic word Muslim within linguistic theory This differs from an analysis based on apophony Other analyses of these languages consider the patterns not to be sound alternations but rather discontinuous roots with discontinuous affixes known as transfixes sometimes considered simulfixes or suprafixes Some theoretical perspectives call up the notion of morphological templates or morpheme skeletons It would also be possible to analyze English in this way as well where the alternation of goose geese could be explained as a basic discontinuous root g se that is filled out with an infix oo singular or ee plural Many would consider this type of analysis for English to be less desirable as this type of infixal morphology is not very prevalent throughout English and the morphemes oo and ee would be exceedingly rare Replacive morphemesAnother analytical perspective on sound alternations treats the phenomena not as merely alternation but rather a replacive morpheme that replaces part of a word In this analysis the alternation between goose geese may be thought of as goose being the basic form where ee is a replacive morpheme that is substituted for oo goose g ee se This usage of the term morpheme which is actually describing a replacement process and not a true morpheme however is more in keeping with Item and Process models of morphology instead of Item and Arrangement models Ablaut motivated compoundingAblaut reduplication or ablaut motivated compounding is a type of word formation of expressives such as onomatopoeia or ideophones in which words are formed by reduplication of a base and alternation of the internal vowel The pattern of vowel alternation in English follows a front to back vowel order which among clipped vowels means a subset of ɪ gt ɛ gt ae gt ʌ gt ɒ gt ʊ as in bing bang boom bish bash bosh criss cross shilly shally snip snap splish splash tic tac toe tick tock ticky tacky wishy washy zig zag And partially in eeny meeny miny moe In many Turkic languages the vowel pattern is low to high as in Turkish cak cuk which follows the English patten and fan fin which contravenes it Examples from Japanese include gata goto rattle kasa koso rustle Examples from Chinese include 叽里咕噜 jiligulu babbling 噼里啪啦 pilipala splashing Some languages do not appear to have a preferred order for example Mongolian with both pay puy and puy pay See alsoLook up apophony in Wiktionary the free dictionary Alternation linguistics Consonant mutation Metaphony Morphology linguistics Nonconcatenative morphology References for ablautReferencesBauer Laurie 2003 Introducing linguistic morphology Washington DC Georgetown University Press p 35 ISBN 9780878403431 Nguyễn 1997 42 44 Asher 1994 1719 Kula 2000 174 See for example Semitic apophony on pp 67 72 of Zuckermann Ghil ad 2003 Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9781403917232 ISBN 9781403938695 1 Ido Shinji 2009 Vowel alternation in disyllabic reduplicatives Poster presented at the International Conference on Minority Languages XII University of Tartu Ido Shinji 2011 Vowel alternation in disyllabic reduplicatives An areal dimension Eesti ja Soome Ugri Keeleteaduse Ajakiri Journal of Estonian and Finno Ugric Linguistics 2 1 185 193 Ido Shinji 2009 Divanu Lugati t Turk teki Yansimali Kelimelerde Unlu Nobetlesmesi Akademik Arastirmalar Dergisi Journal of Academic Studies 10 39 263 272 BibliographyAnderson Stephen R 1985 Inflectional morphology In T Shopen Ed Language typology and syntactic description Grammatical categories and the lexicon Vol 3 pp 150 201 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Especially section 1 3 Stem modifications Asher R E Ed 1994 The Encyclopedia of language and linguistics Oxford Pergamon Press ISBN 0 08 035943 4 Bauer Laurie 2004 A glossary of morphology Washington D C Georgetown University Press Hamano Shoko 1998 The Sound Symbolic System of Japanese CSLI Publications Stanford Haspelmath Martin 2002 Understanding morphology London Arnold Kula Nancy C 2000 The phonology morphology interface Consonant mutations in Bemba In H de Hoop amp T van der Wouden Eds Linguistics in the Netherlands 2000 pp 171 183 Amsterdam John Benjamins Nguyễn Đinh Hoa 1997 Vietnamese Tiếng Việt khong son phấn Amsterdam John Benjamins Publishing Company ISBN 1 55619 733 0 Sapir Edward 1921 Language An introduction to the study of speech New York Harcourt Brace amp Co Spencer Andrew amp Zwicky Arnold M Eds 1998 The handbook of morphology Oxford Blackwell Young Robert W amp Morgan William Sr 1987 The Navajo language A grammar and colloquial dictionary rev ed Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 0 8263 1014 1