bradrn wrote: ↑Sat Jun 12, 2021 9:46 pmWhy?
I think I'm just confused by Donahue's paper atm especially since I have no idea what happened since that rough draft that's available on MEGA.
At the end of p. 43, he writes, "Firstly, there are seven phonetic contrasts in syllables with a high pitch, arranged as follows." Then he labels Table 26 at the top of the next page "vowel qualities encountered in high
or falling pitch syllables" (emphasis mine). Then he writes, "In syllables which have a falling pitch or a low pitch there is still a seven-way contrast, but it is composed of different phonetic vowels. The contrasts found in these environments are in most cases made by different vowels to those seen in high pitched syllables." Then Table 27 is labeled "vowel qualities encountered in syllables with low and falling pitch," and he labels all his examples in (or below) this table as "falling pitch unless stated."
Why did he write "high or falling" in Table 26? Was that just a typo? Did he mean all the examples in that table are just in high pitch? I'm guessing he did.