Skip to main content
Contribution to Book
A Detective Story: Emphatics in Mehri
Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies (2010)
  • Janet C.E. Watson, University of Leeds
  • Alex Bellem
Abstract
Until 1970, Ethio-Semitic was believed to be the only Semitic language sub-family in which the main correlate of "emphasis" is glottalization, a feature said at the time to be due to Cushitic influence. Since the work of T.M. Johnstone, however, it has been argued that glottalization is a South Semitic feature, attested not only in Ethio-Semitic, but also in the Modern South Arabian languages. Two statements in the literature on Modern South Arabian, however, suggested to us that the original evidence needed to be re-investigated: first, some of the "ejectives" are described as at least partially voiced, not a phonetic impossibility, but so far unheard of in the phonological system of any language; and secondly, the degree of glottalization is frequently described as dependent on the phonological environment, although details of the environment in which emphatics are always realized as ejectives are not given. In this paper, we consider acoustic data from Mahriyōt (a Mehri dialect spoken in the easternmost province of Yemen), we examine descriptions of emphatics in other dialects of Mehri and other Modern South Arabian languages, we look at phonological environments in which emphatics are realized as ejectives and those in which they are not, and we conclude that the file on emphasis in these languages needs to be re-opened to fresh judgement.
Publication Date
2010
Editor
Janet C. M. Starkey
Publisher
Archaeopress
DOI
10.2307/41224033
Citation Information
Janet C.E. Watson and Alex Bellem. "A Detective Story: Emphatics in Mehri" Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies Vol. 40 (2010) p. 345 - 356
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/alex-bellem/5/