Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sun Feb 11, 2024 11:16 am
I think so, although my databases don't have perfect coverage. All languages with no nasals have either a /p b/ or a /p β/ contrast, except Crow and Hidatsa, where nasals are allophones of /w r/, and Pawnee, with /p t ts k ʔ s h w r/.
Stop voicing contrasts are too common in Oceania, with the exception of Polynesian, which has plenty of nasals and liquids. It'd be unlikely for such a language to exist there - probably not even in New Guinea.
Hey, anything can happen in New Guinea.
It's possible to contrive a plausible-sounding path from languages with a minimal voiced consonant inventory to languages with none - the simplest is if Pawnee had r > x and reasons to analyze [w] as a -syllabic allophone of /u/.
I can kind of buy that. It's interesting that /p t ts k ʔ s h/ are all apparently consistently voiceless, so they're not even voice-unspecified.
zompist wrote: ↑Sun Feb 11, 2024 3:25 pm
Your periodic reminder that Sign languages are languages; also that the languages we have today are not a random sample and not a guide to the linguistic diversity of, say, 10,000 BCE.
Well yeah, but when I'm talking about phonological universals, I'm talking about spoken languages. Obviously sign languages are exceptions to all phonological universals, but they're trivial cases. And there isn't any reason to assume that the languages of 10,000 BC were any different to those of today, or for that matter those of 20,000 BC. Language change seems by all accounts to be fairly cyclical, so I'd argue that we
do have a random sample. Not a complete sample, but a fairly good one at least.
If we did want to declare that no languages with voiced consonants exist— would that be like declaring that no human can be 9 feet tall (the record is 8' 11"), or like declaring that no human can be 90 feet tall? When we have close edge cases, it's pretty bold to declare a universal.
True enough. Until Northwest Mekeo was discovered (well, until someone actually got far enough through Jones' 800-page grammar to see the phonology) we could wrongly declare that "all languages have coronal phonemes" even though there were known edge cases like Samoan. I'm not sure you can really call Pawnee an edge case, because it does have two voiced consonants, the phonemic status of which isn't in any doubt, and in an inventory which only has 6 or 7 other consonants anyway.
Estav wrote: ↑Sun Feb 11, 2024 7:51 pm
In terms of phonology, it seems questionable to describe an inventory with no voiceless/voiced contrast as containing specifically "voiceless" consonant phonemes: I think many theorists would interpret the phonemes as being unspecified for voicing in that context, not as all being redundantly marked for voicelessness.
I think we can safely say that nasals and approximants can be considered "voiced" phonemes even without a voicing contrast, although I can't really explain why other than that they
are voiced most of the time.
In terms of phonetics, some presence of allophonically voiced consonants seems likely, although it's hard to imagine that we could prove that this would necessarily exist in a language with such a consonant inventory.
Well, we can't prove anything in science, and linguistics is barely even a science, so I'd be satisfied with just a lack of counterexamples plus some good reasoning. I've got the former, but unfortunately not really the latter.
Yous've raised some good points. I'm pretty certain that it's a true universal in the sense that there aren't any exceptions – the only place I could plausibly see going against it would be North America where there aren't any new languages to be found unfortunately – but I don't reckon it's a proper structural universal.