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---
title: "Chol"
author: "Emily Strand"
bibliography: ctu.bib
output: html_document
---

Last updated: 2020-06-26

# Background

**Language Family**: Mayan / Cholan-Tzeltalan / Cholan / Chol-Chontal

* Chol is spoken within the Chiapas state located in southern Mexico.

# Phonology

## Consonants

* Chol is heavily influenced by the Spanish language, thus many phonemes not present within the native inventory appear (e.g. /ɡ/, /d/, /t/, /n/) [@Alvarez2011, p. 35; @Hopkins2008, p. 89].
* @Hopkins2008 specifically state that unpalatalized /t/ and /n/ have been introduced into the language (p. 89). However, they aren't often recognized as being part of the inventory, and speakers in general tend to implement the palatalized forms, thus I have opted to just use /tʲ/ and /ɲ/.
* @Alvarez2011 includes /b/ in the phonemic inventory (p. 35), whereas @Coon2017 includes /ɓ/ (p. 3). I have chosen to use /b/, given that the ingressive property of the Proto-Mayan consonant /ɓ/ has since been lost [@Polian2006 as cited in @Alvarez2011, p. 34].

```{r echo=FALSE, message=FALSE, warning=FALSE, results = 'asis'}

library(dplyr)
library(knitr)
library(kableExtra)

consonants <- read.table(textConnection('
"Manner of Articulation"     Labial    Alveolar    Postalveolar  Palatal    Velar    Glottal
Stops                      "p  pʼ  b"     ""           ""       "tʲ  tʲʼ"   "k  kʼ"     "ʔ"
Affricates                    ""       "ts  tsʼ"    "tʃ  tʃʼ"       ""        ""        ""
Fricatives                    ""          "s"          "ʃ"          ""       "x"        ""
Nasals                       "m"          ""           ""           "ɲ"       ""        ""
Trills                        ""          "r"          ""           ""        ""        ""
Approximants                  "w"         "l"          ""           "j"       ""        ""
'), TRUE)

kable(consonants, col.names = c("Manner of Articulation", "Labial", "Alveolar", "Postalveolar", "Palatal", "Velar", "Glottal"), align = 'c') %>%
  kable_styling("bordered") %>%
  add_header_above(c("", "Place of Articulation" = 6)) %>%
  column_spec(1, bold = TRUE) %>%
  footnote(general = "Note: For phonemes that share a cell, those on the left are plain (voiceless) and those on the right are ejective (voiceless). The labial stops are ordered plain (voiceless), ejective (voiceless), and voiced.", general_title = "")
```

## Vowels

* Vowel length was once contrastive in Chol, but it has since been lost [@Alvarez2011, p. 41].

```{r echo=FALSE, message=FALSE, warning=FALSE, results = 'asis'}

vowels <- read.table(textConnection('
         Front      Central       Back
High      "i"         "ɨ"          "u"
Mid       "e"         ""           "o"
Low       ""          "a"           ""
'), TRUE)

kable(vowels, align = 'c') %>%
  kable_styling("bordered") %>%
  column_spec(1, bold = TRUE)
```    

# Alphabet

* Although the Chol alphabet was normalized in 2010 [@Alvarez2011, p. 42], represented by the alphabet below, the Crúbadán corpus seems to represent older orthographies (see Orthographic Variations). Since there appears to be no conflation of the phonemes with any of the transcriptions, I will include all in the ruleset.
* As seen with the orthographic variations, an apostrophe indicates a glottal stop except when following a consonant, which indicates an ejective [@Coon2017, p. 2].


```{r echo=FALSE, message=FALSE, warning=FALSE, results = 'asis'}

alphabet <- read.table(textConnection('
Grapheme      Phoneme
"a"             "/a/"
"b"             "/b/"
"e"             "/e/"
"i"             "/i/"
"j"             "/x/"
"k"             "/k/"
"k’"            "/kʼ/"
"l"             "/l/"
"m"             "/m/"
"n"             "/ɲ/"
"ñ"             "/ɲ/"
"o"             "/o/"
"p"             "/p/"
"p’"            "/pʼ/"
"r"             "/r/"
"s"             "/s/"
"t"             "/tʲ/"
"u"             "/u/"
"w"             "/w/"
"x"             "/ʃ/"
"y"             "/j/"
"ä"             "/ɨ/"
"\\-"           "/ʔ/"
**Digraph**      ""
"ch"            "/tʃ/"
"ch’"           "/tʃʼ/"
"ts"            "/ts/"
"ts’"           "/tsʼ/"
"ty"            "/tʲ/"
"ty’"           "/tʲʼ/"
"**Orthographic variation**"  ""
"c"             "/k/"
"qu"            "/k/"
"tz"            "/ts/"
"tz’"           "/tsʼ/"
"ü"             "/ɨ/"
"ʌ"             "/ɨ/"
"\'"            "/ʔ/"
'), TRUE)

kable(alphabet, align = 'c') %>%
  kable_styling("bordered")
```


# Syllable Structure

* Syllables in Chol consist of the following structures [@Alvarez2011, pp. 46, 58], the consonant clusters of which do not consist of geminate consonants:
    - CV  
    - CVC  
    - CVCC  
    - CCVC  
    - CCVCC  

# Lenition Rules

* /b/ and /l/ are often deleted word-finally [@Alvarez2011, p. 40].

# Misc. Rules

* /b/, /l/, /w/, /n/, and /ɲ/ are devoiced word-finally [@Alvarez2011, p. 39].
* Glottal stops precede vowels in word-initial positions [@Alvarez2011. p. 38].
* /ɲ/ assimilates to the place of the following consonant [@Alvarez2011. p. 48].
* Vowel harmony is present in Chol [@Alvarez2011. p. 50].
* In some dialects there is free variation between /k/ and /tʃ/, /l/ and /ʔ/, as well as /k/ and /ʃ/ [@Alvarez2011. pp. 50-51].
* /tʃ/ changes to /ʃ/ preceding /tʲ/ [@Alvarez2011. p. 59].
* /ʃ/ changes to /x/ preceding palatal consonants [@Alvarez2011. p 60].
* Epenthetic glides appear intervocalically as vowel clusters are prohibited in Chol [@Alvarez2011. pp. 51-54].
* Consonant elision is used to avoid geminates/double consonants [@Alvarez2011, p. 58].

# References