Front rounded vowel explained

pronounced as /vowels/A front rounded vowel is a particular type of vowel that is both front and rounded.

The front rounded vowels defined by the IPA include:

Front rounded vowels are cross-linguistically relatively uncommon, but occur in a number of well-known languages, including French, German, Turkish, and Mandarin.[1]

Lip rounding is produced by bringing the corners of the lips together and protruding them forward. This is harder to do while producing low or open vowels since the lips are being stressed vertically. This may explain why low vowels are usually unrounded. Roundedness is usually associated with back vowels. This helps to reinforce the low-pitched acoustic overtones associated with back vowels. This makes rounded back vowels more distinct from other vowels.

The high vowel pronounced as /[y]/ is the most common, while the low vowel pronounced as /[ɶ]/ is extremely rare. This is consistent with the general correlation between rounding and vowel height.

Front rounded vowels usually occur in languages with vowel systems that distinguish a higher-than-average number of different vowel qualities. Typically, when a front rounded vowel occurs, the inventory of vowels includes an unrounded front vowel and a rounded back vowel of similar height. For example, many languages with pronounced as /[ø]/, such as Kalmyk, Hungarian, or Turkish, also have pronounced as /[e]/ and pronounced as /[o]/. Because of this, and what's known about many languages with front rounded vowels, front rounded vowels typically reflect a development from a vowel system that previously had fewer members.

Geographical distribution

Most languages with front rounded vowels are found in the more northern parts of Eurasia.

Language families in which front-rounded vowels are common are:

Development

Many of the Uralic, Mongolic, and Turkic languages that contain front rounded vowels also have vowel harmony systems, such as rounding or backness harmony. The processes which bring about fronting or roundedness harmony may be important in introducing front rounded vowels into a language's inventory.

Front rounded vowels can also develop independently of vowel harmony. In French, pronounced as /[y]/ is the result of an older pronounced as /[u]/ moving forward while remaining rounded. French re-developed pronounced as /[u]/ by moving pronounced as /[o]/ upwards. For example, the familiar second-person pronoun, pronounced pronounced as /[ty]/, is spelled the same as its Latin source which had a back vowel, and the plural or polite second-person pronoun is pronounced with pronounced as /[u]/, but it derives from Latin which had a mid vowel. Some varieties of modern English are similarly fronting pronounced as /[u]/. In cases like these the creation of front rounded vowels is independent of adjacent sounds in the word.

In other languages front rounded vowels evolved as previously back vowels became fronted by adjacent segments. For example, in German, back vowels became fronted when followed by high front vowels. The front vowels causing this change were often in inflectional or derivational endings and were then lost or changed into mid vowels. In the different Chinese languages, pronounced as /[y]/ is often derived from pronounced as /[ut]/. The tongue must be moved forward to pronounce the pronounced as /[t]/, so the pronounced as /[u]/ can shift forward as well. If the pronounced as /[t]/ is lost then the change from pronounced as /[ut]/ to pronounced as /[y]/ is complete.

Considering the different historical scenarios which can give rise to front rounded vowels, it is notable that they are relatively concentrated in a particular geographical region. It's likely that the presence of front rounded vowels in some languages can facilitate phonetically-motivated processes in other nearby languages.

References

pronounced as /navigation/

Notes and References

  1. Book: Maddieson, Ian . The World Atlas of Language Structures Online . 2013 . Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology . Dryer . Matthew S. . Matthew Dryer . Leipzig . Front Rounded Vowels . Ian Maddieson . 24 April 2022 . Haspelmath . Martin . Martin Haspelmath . https://wals.info/chapter/11.