FRONT VOWEL CHAIN SHIFT AND THE VOWEL REPHONOLOGIZATION IN EARLY MIDDLE CHINESE

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Abstract

In the history of Chinese general language, with the back vowel raised chain shift, the front vowel raised chain shift occurred in the early period of the Middle Ancient. This front raising is a push chain started slightly later than the back vowel raised chain shift which also happened in the Eastern Han Dynasty. Comparing the front and back vowel raised chain shift, the symmetrical and non-symmetric sound-change output patterns can be observed. A series of vowel rephonologization resulted from front vowel raised chain shift was characterized by the differentiation and merging of rhyme groups Ge1 Ge3, Zhi Ge2, and Zhi2 Zhi1, which formed Ma-Er, Jia, Jie, Ma-San, Zhi, Zhi, and Qi rhymes in the Middle Ancient with fronting and collaboration of rhyme groups Wei1 Wei2 and Zhi. As for the patterns in Qieyun of rhymes, Jia and Qi were shaped in Liu Song Dynasty, while the formation of Jie rhyme was after the Liu Song, and the Zhi and Zhi rhymes were not earlier than the Jin Dynasty. The form of front vowel raised chain shift is incomplete and belongs to localized chain shift. The structural adjustment of Chinese vowel system occurred after the start of the long vowel raising and before the completion of the short vowel lengthening.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)231-258
Number of pages28
JournalJournal of Chinese Linguistics
Volume50
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

Keywords

  • Front vowel raised chain shift
  • Phonology of Middle Ancient Chinese
  • Rephonologization
  • Sound change
  • Vowel system configuration

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