2. Phonological System



2.1 Vowels


Udi
distinguishes six base vowels:

/a/
kala
ala
g/ar
house
high
son
/e/
elas
besun
s^elle
oath
to make, produce, light verb (transitive)
it is good, OK
/i/
ive?l
biq'sun
p'i
holy
to take
blood
/o/
o
portbesun
oq'o
gras
to carry, support, suffer
vinegar
/u/
uksun
furupsun
s^u
to eat
to look for, walk around
who?
/e./
q'e.ndrme.z
ze.g/
qe.le.g/
fever (Armenian loan)
disrupted Azeri loan)
character (Azeri loan)

/e./ is a central vowel that (roughly speaking) corresponds to Russian /y/.

Additionally, Udi has three palatalized vowels (/ä/,/ö/, /ü/, all of them of secondary origin) and six pharyngealizedvowels (a?/, /e?/, /i?/, /o?/, /o?/, /e.?/) that - in the speech of someUdi - may merge with the correpüonding palatalized variants (/a?/, /e?/> /ä/, /o?/ > ö, /u?/ > /ü/). Pharyngealized vowelsare producedby raising the larynx and compressing the air stream in thepharynx.

Of these vowels, only /a/, /e/, /i/ and /u/ (sometiems old /ü/) reflect Proto-Lezgian vowel phonemes. /o/ normally stems from *Cwe- (labialized consonant plus /e/) or from *ue-. Pharyngealizued vowels either reflect older pharyngealized consonnants plus vowel (*C?V) or result from the loss of a subsequent *-r (sometimes, pharyngealized vowels reflect the correponding palatal in loans). 

There are no nasalized vowels; length may result from teh fusion of two subsequent vowels.




2.2 Consonants

Standard Udi has the following inventory of consonant phonemes (place of articulation is indicated approximatively only):


Stops
     
Affricates
Spirants

Vd
Vl
Gl
Vd
Vl
Gl
Vd
Vl
Labial
b
p
p'



v
f
Dental
d
t
t'
dz
c
c'
z
s
Alveolar



dz/
c/
c/'
z/
s/
Palatal



dz^
c^
c^'
z^
s^
Velar
g
k
k'



g/
x
Uvular

q
q'





Laryngeal







h

Sonants: /r/, /l/, /m/, /n/

Vd = voiced
Vl = voiceless
Gl = Glottalized

Note that many speakers replace the alveolar series by 'strong' (or lengthened) palatals.

Examples:

baiesun
to come in, go in, enter
p'i
blood
pesun
to say, light verb
va?baksun
to believe
fi
wine
dizik'
snake
tul
young animal
t'ul
grape
dzax
left
cicik'
lily
c'i
name
zu
I
sa
one
dz/ug/ab
answer
c/o
face
c/'aq'
lightning
z/e
stone
s/um
bread
girbesun
to gather
kala
great
k'as^a
finger
g/ar
son
xa?
dog
qabun
star
q'oq'
neck
has^ono
that one there
me
this
nep'
sleep
laft'esun
to touch
arux
fire




2.3 Phonotactics

a) Monosyllabic:

V
o
e
gras
what
CV
bi
bi?
g/i
done
heavy
day
VC
ap'
ul
is^
sweat
wolf
man
CVV
bia
mia
k'ua
evening
here
at home
VVC
ait
äiz
word
village
CVC
c^al
gon
xas^
fence
color
moon
CVCC
(basically with loans)
dündz^
dindz^
vaxt'
corner
peace
time


b) Polysyllabic


V-CV (oq'a 'under')
CV-CV (k'ic'i 'small')
CV-CVC (qe.qe.p' 'knee')
V-CVC (ive?l 'holy')
V-CV-VC (o?xa?i?l 'yogurt')
CVC-CV (k'alpi 'called')
VC-CV (u?g/sa 'drinking')
V-CV-CVC (eg/elen 'donkey:erg')
CVC-CVC (q'urban 'sacrifice')
CVCC-CVC (bersxun 'to grind')
.....

A rather long chain is given e.g. in:

iaq'c^'ebakalt'g/oxoq'un [fuq'pe]
CVC-CV-CVCC-CV-CV-CVC [CVC-CV]
'they robbed those who passed the way' = 'they robbed the travellers'.

[iaq'-c^'e-bak-al-t'-g/-oxo-q'un fu?q'-p-e]
way-over-lv-part-se:obl-pl-abl-3pl rob-lv-perf

Restrictions:

- CVCC-structures normally have a sonant as their second consonant (CVRC); true CVCC-sturctures are rare except in loans.
- Initial r- is prohibited
- Initial consonant clusters are not allowed (except for younger loans, such as Armenian qndrme.z 'fever' (read: q'e.ndrme.z)).




2.4 Major phonetic processes  


Non accented vowels tend to be eliminated between consonants and when final (bun < bu-nu 'you are'), arq'anci < aq'anuci 'you (sg.) should sit',a?ilux < a?ielux 'children', z/og/la < z/g/ula 'in the summer');
Finals -o is often contracted with a preceding vowel (so: < sa-o 'one', kalo: < kala-o 'a big one'), except if the preceding vowel is -i (baki-o '(s)he who has become...').

Suffixes are often assimilated to secondray features of preceding vowels(palatalization, pharyngealization, cp. bo?q' 'pig', bo?q'u?rg/o?xo 'fromthe pigs' etc.. [palatalizationand pharyngealization are rather suprasegmentalthan segmantal features].

Assimilation takes regularly place in the following instances:

l + n > ll  (k'alnexa  > k'allexa '(s)he calls')
r + n > rr (karnexa > karrexa '(s)he lives')
r + l > rr (saturla > saturra 'with one leg, amputated')
d + l > dd (xodnu > xoddu 'tree:dat1)

Metathesis is an important feature in the verb morphology: the group -des- regularly changes to -st'- (tadesun > tast'un 'to give'), -c^s- resultsin -s^c^- or -sc^- (muc^sun > mus^c^un 'to kiss', ec^sun > esc^un 'tocarry'). Metathesis is also documented in lexical structures (esp. in loans),e.g. e?l?em 'donkey' < *h.elem < *h.emel < h.ima:r (Arabic). amdar(Nidzh) 'man' < adam-ar (pl. tant.).




2.5 Stress


Today, the stress pattern of Udi resembles that of Azeri (historically, Udi had its words stressed on the first or second syllable). In many instances, the final syllable is stressed. Yet, a considerable number of en- or endoclitics provoke the accentuation of the preceding syllable (cf. section 3.3.3 for personal agreement clitics). Some particles call for a clitic because of their inherent stress, e.g. q'a- (adh),gi- (cond), te- (neg), e.g.

téne baksà '(s)he is not'
bürmis^q'áq'un bi 'they have to give order'
campegízui 'if I would write' (also gíz campei or camgízpei)

A complex example:

báneke sa c/obán met'ái bánekei xibq'ó eg/él.sa vaxt'á sa is^én arí me eg/elg/oxó k'ic'it'úxne fu?q'pé.

he-was one shepherd whose it-was 60 sheep a time a man came this sheep-of the-small-onerobbed.
Once upon a time there was a shepherd who had 60 sheep; once a man came and robbed the youngest of these sheep.

[ba-ne-k-e sa c/oban me-t'-ai ba-ne-k-e-i xib-q'o eg/el sa vaxt'-a sa is^-en ar-i me eg/el-g/-oxo k'ic'-t'-ux-ne fu?q-p-e]

be-3sg:ec-perf one shepherd:abs prox-sa:obl-gen be-3sg:ec-perf 3-20 sheep one day-loc one man-erg come:past-aor prox sheep-pl-abl small-se:obl-dat2-3sg rob-lv-perf