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2.1 Consonants<br />

According to my analysis, Mono has 33 consonant phonemes, shown in Figure<br />

2.1. Three <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se phonemes are given in paren<strong>the</strong>ses, indicating that I consider <strong>the</strong>m to<br />

be marginal in nature: , , <strong>and</strong> D. The implosive stops <strong>and</strong> are voiced <strong>and</strong> are<br />

produced with <strong>the</strong> ingressive glottalic airstream mechanism. All voiceless stops are<br />

unaspirated.<br />

labial alveolar palatal velar labial-velar glottal<br />

implosives ()<br />

vl. stops F J J5 J5 F F F F <br />

vd. stops > @ @ @ @ @ C C><br />

C><br />

prenas. stops > >> > @ @@ @ @ @ @ @ C CCC C> C> C> C><br />

vl. fricatives B I 5 (D)<br />

vd. fricatives L <br />

nasals ()<br />

flaps/trills M H<br />

laterals <br />

semi-vowels M<br />

Figure 2.1: Consonant phonemes in Mono<br />

The pronunciation <strong>of</strong> each phoneme is <strong>the</strong> same as <strong>the</strong> identical symbol in <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>International</strong> Phonetic Alphabet, except where explicitly noted. Note that though some<br />

phonemes are shown as digraphs or trigraphs (e.g. F F F F <strong>and</strong> @ @), @ @ <strong>the</strong>y are considered to be<br />

single phonemes. The choice <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se particular representations is to avoid undue<br />

complexity in transcription. The phonetic detail <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> phonemes will be discussed below.<br />

Several typological observations concerning <strong>the</strong> Mono consonant system are<br />

worth noting. First, <strong>the</strong> implosive consonants follow <strong>the</strong> typological tendencies for such<br />

segments—<strong>the</strong>y are voiced, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>y show a preference for fronted place <strong>of</strong> articulations,<br />

i.e. labial is preferred to coronal, <strong>and</strong> coronal is preferred to velar (Maddieson 1984: 111).<br />

Second, Mono has a labial flap M which is rare in <strong>the</strong> world’s languages. Because little<br />

has been written on this segment, I devote Appendix D to a cross-linguistic study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

sound.<br />

27

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