Western Pwo language explained

Western Pwo
Nativename:ဖျိၩ့, ဖျိၩ့ၡိ
Pronunciation:pronounced as /pwo/
States:Myanmar
Region:Irrawaddy Delta
Ethnicity:Karen
Speakers:210,000
Date:no date
Ref:e15
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Fam2:(Tibeto-Burman)
Fam3:Karenic
Fam4:Pwo
Script:Mon–Burmese
(Western Pwo alphabet)
Minority: Myanmar
Iso3:pwo
Glotto:pwow1235
Glottorefname:Pwo Western Karen

Western Pwo, or Delta Pwo, is a Karen language of Burma with 210,000 estimated speakers. It is not intelligible with other varieties of Pwo. There is little dialectal variation.

Distribution

Einme, Maubin, Pathein, Twante, Kyonpyaw and Hinthada towns

Phonology

pronounced as /notice/

Consonants

The consonants of Western Pwo are as follows:[1]

Consonant phonemes
BilabialDentalAlveolarAlveolo-
palatal
PalatalLabial-
velar
VelarGlottal
Plosivepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Nasalpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Fricativepronounced as /link/ ([{{IPA link|d̪}}~{{IPA link|d̪ð}}])pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/ ([{{IPA link|t̪}}~{{IPA link|t̪θ}}])pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/
Approximantpronounced as /link/ ([{{IPA link|r}}~{{IPA link|ɹ}}])pronounced as /link/ ([{{IPA link|j}}~{{IPA link|ʝ}}])pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/

Vowels

Open rhymes

There are 12 open rhymes:

MonophthongsDiphthongs
FrontCentralBackFront offglideBack offglide
Closepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/
Close-midpronounced as /link/ [{{IPA link|e̞}}]pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Open-midpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Openpronounced as /link/pronounced as /ai/ [{{IPA|äi}}]pronounced as /au/ [{{IPA|äʊ}}~{{IPA|äo}}]

Nasalized rhymes

There are 8 nasalized rhymes:

MonophthongsDiphthongs
(pronounced as /iɴ/)
pronounced as /əɴ/pronounced as /eiɴ/pronounced as /əɯɴ/pronounced as /ouɴ/
pronounced as /aɴ/pronounced as /aiɴ/pronounced as /auɴ/

These rhymes are realized as follows:

The nasalization of pronounced as //-əɴ// is very weak and may be completely eliminated. In that case, pronounced as //-əɴ// loses its phonetic distinction from pronounced as //-ə//. Therefore, in some speakers, pronounced as //-əɴ// has merged into pronounced as //-ə//. The nasalization of pronounced as //-eiɴ/, /-əɯɴ/, /-ouɴ/, /-aiɴ//, and pronounced as //-auɴ// is also often weak. As a result, the distinction between pronounced as //-ai// and pronounced as //-aiɴ// and that between pronounced as //-au// and pronounced as //-auɴ// may be ambiguous for some speakers. The occurrence of pronounced as //-əɯɴ// is very rare.

Stopped rhymes

There are 8 stopped rhymes:

MonophthongsDiphthongs
pronounced as /ɨʔ/pronounced as /eiʔ/pronounced as /əɯʔ/pronounced as /ouʔ/
pronounced as /eʔ/pronounced as /oʔ/
pronounced as /aʔ/pronounced as /ɔʔ/

These rhymes appear when there is a glottal stop at the end of the syllable. The final glottal stop may be an inherent feature of the checked tone rather than a syllable-final consonant.

These rhymes are realized as follows:

Tones

Western Pwo is a tonal language, which means phonemic contrasts can be made on the basis of the tone of a vowel. In Western Pwo, these contrasts involve not only pitch, but also phonation, intensity (loudness), duration, and vowel quality.

There are four tones: low-level, high-level, falling, and checked tones. In the table, they are shown with /a/ with tone marks. The exact phonetic realization of pronounced as //a// is pronounced as /[ä]/. Additionally, there are atonic syllables, and they are represented by not adding any tone marks. The only rhyme that can appear in atonic syllables is pronounced as //-ə//. These are pronounced short and weak.

Tone Phonemic Phonetic Example Gloss[2]
Low-level pronounced as //à// pronounced as /[a11]/ မၫ
pronounced as //mà//
'wife'
High-level pronounced as //á// pronounced as /[a55]/ မၩကၩ
pronounced as //má ká//
'to work'
Falling pronounced as //â// pronounced as /[a51]/ မါ
pronounced as //mâ//
'debt'
Checked pronounced as //aʔ// pronounced as /[aʔ51]/ မၬ
pronounced as //maʔ//
'son-in-law'
Atonic pronounced as //ə//
pronounced as //mə//
colloquial for မွဲ 'to be true/to be indeed'

In syllables ending with pronounced as //ɴ//, the checked tone is excluded:

The pitch of the checked tone is almost the same as that of the falling tone. Therefore, some speakers confuse the checked tone with a falling tone. Giving a phonological interpretation of the checked tone is not a simple task. The following two possibilities must be considered: (1) it is a distinct tone from the other tones, with a final glottal stop as its inherent feature; and (2) it is a falling tone that appears in the syllable ending with a glottal stop. If we adopt interpretation (1), there is no need to phonologically recognize syllables ending with a glottal stop, because the final glottal stop is a feature of the tone. If we adopt interpretation (2), we need to phonologically recognize syllables ending with a glottal stop. Kato (1995) adopted interpretation (2) because the pitch of the checked tone is almost the same as that of the falling tone. However, the possibility of interpretation (1) remains. Therefore, adopting an interpretation that combines (1) and (2); that is, the final glottal stop is an inherent feature of the checked tone, and at the same time, it is also regarded as a phonological syllable-final consonant.

Syllable structure

The syllable structure of Western Pwo can be represented as C1(C2)V1(V2)(C3)/(T). “C” stands for a consonant, “V” for a vowel, and “T” for a tone. C1 is an initial consonant, C2 is a medial consonant, and C3 is a final consonant. One or two vowels may occur and are represented by V1 and V2. Bracketed elements may or may not occur. The part of C1(C2)- is called an onset, and that of -V1(V2)(C3) is called a rhyme.

The phonemes that can appear as C2 are pronounced as //-w-/ [w], /-l-/ [l], /-r-/ [r~ɹ]/, and pronounced as //-j-/ [j~ʝ]/. The combinations of C1 and C2 that have been found to date are listed as follows:

! colspan="17" align="center"C1
! align="center"pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
C2pronounced as /link/++++++++++++++++
pronounced as /link/++++++++
pronounced as /link/+++
pronounced as /link/+++

The structure of a rhyme can be represented as -V1(V2) (C3). Among the components of a rhyme, the position of C3 can only be occupied by pronounced as //-ɴ// or pronounced as //-ʔ//. The nasal pronounced as //-ɴ// is a phoneme that can only occur as a final consonant. It is realized as pronounced as /[ɴ]/ or nasalization of the preceding vowel. Rhymes can be divided into three types: open rhymes without C3, nasalized rhymes with pronounced as //-ɴ//, and stopped rhymes with pronounced as //-ʔ//.

Example text

Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Western Pwo:[3]

ၦကိၭဂၩ ဂဲၫထဲၩ့လၩ့ဖျဲၪလၧ ဆၧပျီၩဖျ့ၭမီၪ့ဎီၩ့ အဆၧလၩဆၧဖၩ့အဖၧၩ့မွဲဂ့ၩ, ဆၧပျီၩဖျ့ၭမီၪ့ဎီၩ့ အခွံးအရ့ၩဖၧၩ့မွဲဂ့ၩနီၪလီၫ. ၦၥံၪလဖၪကြၨၭအီၪလၧ ဆၧၥ့ၪယၪနၪၥ့ၪ လၧအအၪ့နၩ့ဘဲၩ့ဖၭဆၧဒဲ ၥၭလၧအၥ့ၪယၫတခ့ၭဖဝၭတၭ, ၦၥံၪလဖၪ ကြၨၭဖံၭထံၩဖံၭၥိၭလၧ ဆၧအဲၪဆၧကွံၩအဖၧၩ့နီၪလီၫ.
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Burmese:[4]
Burmese: လူတိုင်းသည် တူညီလွတ်လပ်သော ဂုဏ်သိက္ခာဖြင့် လည်းကောင်း၊ တူညီလွတ်လပ်သော အခွင့်အရေးများဖြင့် လည်းကောင်း၊ မွေးဖွားလာသူများ ဖြစ်သည်။ ထိုသူတို့၌ ပိုင်းခြား ဝေဖန်တတ်သော ဉာဏ်နှင့် ကျင့်ဝတ်သိတတ်သော စိတ်တို့ရှိကြ၍ ထိုသူတို့သည် အချင်းချင်း မေတ္တာထား၍ ဆက်ဆံကျင့်သုံးသင့်၏။
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in English:[5]
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

References

Notes and References

  1. Atsuhiko Kato (March 2022)
  2. Rev. Purser & Saya Tun Aung
  3. UDHR PWO
  4. UDHR MYANMAR
  5. UDHR