Hostname: page-component-68c7f8b79f-tw422 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-01-05T21:13:07.531Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Rhythmic syncope and opacity in Mojeño Trinitario

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2026

Françoise Rose*
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Dynamique Du Langage (CNRS/Université Lyon2), 16 avenue Berthelot, 69007 Lyon, France

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

This paper presents rhythmic syncope in Mojeño Trinitario, an Arawak language spoken in lowland Bolivia. In this language, every vowel that is in a weak prosodic position can syncopate. The syncope pattern of Mojeño Trinitario is remarkable for several reasons. First, it involves a regular, categorical and complete deletion rather than a statistical reduction of vowels. Second, it applies similarly to words with either of two stress patterns: iambic words, which make up the great majority of words, and trochaic ones, much less numerous. Third, a great variety of consonant sequences are the result of syncope, and syllabification applies again after syncope. Fourth, rhythmic syncope actually underapplies: almost half of the vowels that are in a position to syncopate are maintained, and vowel quality plays a statistical role in immunity to syncope. Fifth, due to a rich morphology and a set of complex phonotactic rules applying sequentially, syncope leads to extreme opacity. The data presented in tins paper in a theory-neutral way contribute to the typology of rhythmic syncope. It will also be of interest to phonologists considering constraint-based vs. derivational models of phonology.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
Published by the Linguistic Society of America with permission of the author under a CC BY 3.0 license.
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 Françoise Rose.

Footnotes

*

I want to thank several people for their support and enlightening comments on the paper: Megan Crowhurst, Matthew Gordon, Denis Creissels, Larry Hyman, Gérard Philippson, Shelece Easterday, Spike Gildea, Lev Michael and Alexis Michaud. I also want to acknowledge the work of the editor and two anonymous reviewers that greatly helped improve the paper. I am also very grateful to Zoe Tribur, Paul Olejarczuk, Jennifer Krzonowski and Keli Yerian for their help. The first version of the paper was written during the academic year I spent at the Department of Linguistics of the University of Oregon, supported by a CNRS grant Soutien à la Mobilité Internationale.

References

1898. Canciones (Trinidad, 26 de noviembre de 1898). Ms., Archive of the Compañía de Jesús (La Paz), Provincia Franciscana. Lengua Vernáculas. Reprint Edition.Google Scholar
Abbott, Miriam. 1991. Macushi. In Derbyshire, Desmond & Pullum, Geoffrey (eds.), Handbook of Amazonian languages, voi. 3. 23120. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra. 1999. The Arawak language family. In Dixon, R.M.W. & Aikhenvald, Alexandra (eds.), The Amazonian languages. 65106. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Andersson, Samuel. 2019. There is no rule-ordering paradox in Mojeño Trinitario. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America, New York.Google Scholar
Ball, Martin J. & Müller, Nicole. 2016. Challenging sonority: Cross-linguistic evidence. Sheffield: Equinox Publishing Limited.Google Scholar
Becerra Casanovas, Rogers. 1980. De ayer y de hoy. Diccionario del idioma mojeño a través del tiempo. Estudio comparativo sobre su evolución. La Paz: Proinsa.Google Scholar
Beckman, Jill. 1997. Positional faithfulness, positional neutralization, and Shona vowel harmony. Phonology 14(1). 146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beckman, Jill. 1998. Positional faithfulness. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts dissertation.Google Scholar
Bloomfield, Leonard. 1957. Eastern Ojibwa. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.10.3998/mpub.9690358CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bybee, Joan. 2001. Phonology: and language use. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511612886CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cable, Seth. 2004. A metrical analysis of syncope in Tlingit. Ms. Reprint Edition.Google Scholar
Casali, Roderic F. 1996. Resolving hiatus. Los Angeles: University of California dissertation.Google Scholar
Casali, Roderic F. 1997. Vowel elision in hiatus contexts: Which vowel goes? Language 73 (3). 493533. https://doi.org/10.2307/415882.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crevels, Mily & Muysken, Pieter. 2015. Las lenguas del Oriente boliviano: Presentación y antecedentes. In Crevels, Mily & Muysken, Pieter (eds.), Lenguas de Bolivia. 13–7. LaPaz: Plural Editores.Google Scholar
Crosswhite, Katherine M. 2004. Vowel reduction. In Hayes, Bruce, Kirchner, Robert & Steriade, Donca (eds.), Phonetically based phonology. 191231. Cambridge, GB: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowhurst, Megan & Michael, Lev. 2005. Iterative footing and prominence-driven Stress in Nanti (Kampa). Language 81 (1). 4795. https://doi.org/10.1353/lan.2005.0013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Stuart. 1998. Syllable contact in Optimality Theory. Korean Journal of Linguistics 23(2). 181211.Google Scholar
de Carvalho, Femando & Rose, Françoise. 2018. Comparative reconstruction of Proto-Mojeño and the phonological diversification of Mojeno dialects. Liames 18(1). 748.Google Scholar
Fabricano Noe, Felicia, Guají, Justo Semo & Olivio, Janneth. 2003. Gıda del alfabeto mojeño trinitario. La Paz: Ministerio de Educación de Bolivia.Google Scholar
Gill, Wayne. 1957. Trinitario grammar. San Lorenzo de Mojos: Misión Nuevas Tribus.Google Scholar
Gill, Wayne. 1993. Diccionario Trinitario-Castellano y Castellano-Trinitario. Ms. Reprint Edition.Google Scholar
Goodman, Beverley. 1992. Implications of Pomo epenthesis for a theory of syllabification. Chicago Linguistic Society 26(2), Parasession on the syllable in phonetics and phonology. 143157.Google Scholar
Gordon, Matthew. 2005. A perceptually-driven account of onset-sensitive stress. Natural Language & Linguistic Theory 23 (3). 595653. https://doi.org/10.1007/sll049-004-8874-9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gordon, Matthew & Rose, Françoise. 2019. Acoustic correlates of metrical prominence in Mojeño Trinitario. Presented at the International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Gouskova, Maria. 2003. Deriving economy: Syncope in Optimality Theory. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts dissertation.Google Scholar
Hill, Kenneth C., and Black, Mary E.. 1998. Hopi dictionary, Hopiikwa lavaytutuveni. A Hopi-English dictionary of the third Mesa dialect. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Hockett, Charles. 1939. Potawatomi syntax. Language 15 (4). 235–48. https://doi.org/10.2307/409107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hockett, Charles F. 1948. Potawatomi I: Phonemics, morphophonemics, and morphological survey. International Journal of American Linguistics 14. 1. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1086/463970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoijer, Harry. 1933. Tonkawa: an Indian language of Texas. In Boas, Franz (ed.), Handbook of American Indian languages, voi. Part 3. 1148. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Ibáñez Noza, Eulogio, Nojune, Basilio Nolvani, Jare, Claudio Guaji, Pedraza, Adalberto Guaji, Jare, Bartola Guaji & Noza, Liverato Guaji. 2009. Gramática Mojeña Trinitaria, vol. Tomo II. Trinidad, Beni: Centro Social y Comunitario “Ipeno limitti”. Cabildo Indigenal de Trinidad.Google Scholar
Jacobs, Haike. 2004. Rhythmic vowel deletion in OT: Syncope in Latin. Probus 16 (1). 6390. https://doi.org/10.1515/prbs.2004.004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jeanne, LaVerne. 1982. Some phonological rules of Hopi. International Journal of American Linguistics 48 (3). 245–70. https://doi.org/10.1086/465734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kager, René. 1997. Rhythmic vowel deletion in Optimality Theory. In Roca, Iggy (ed.), Derivations and constraints in phonology. 463–99. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kahn, Daniel. 1976. Syllable-based generalizations in English phonology. Cambridge: Massachusetts Institute of Technology dissertation. (Published 1980, New York: Garland.).Google Scholar
Kiparsky, Paul. 2015. Stratal OT: A synopsis and FAQs. In Hsiao, Yuchau E. & Wee, Lian-Hee (eds.), Capturing phonological shades within and across languages. 242. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambidge Scholars Publishing.Google Scholar
Lockwood, Hunter. 2012. Revisiting Potawatomi syncope. Paper presented at the 44th Algonquian Conference, Chicago.Google Scholar
Marbán, Pedro. 1702. Arte de la lengua Moxa, con su vocabulario, y cathecismo. Lima: Imprenta Real de Joseph de Contreras.Google Scholar
Marquardt, Christine. 2018. Opacity in Mojeño Trinitario reduplication: An argument for Harmonie Serialism without Serial Template Satisfaction. Presented at the Old World Conference on Phonology, London.Google Scholar
McCarthy, John J. 2008. The serial interaction of stress and syncope. Natural Language & Linguistic Theory 26 (3). 499546. https://doi.org/10.1007/sll049-008-9051-3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCarthy, John J. & Prince, Alan. 2001 [1993]. Prosodic Morphology. Constraint interaction and satisfaction. Ms., Rutgers Optimality Archive. Reprint Edition.Google Scholar
Munshi, Sadaf & Crowhurst, Megan J.. 2012. Weight sensitivity and syllable codas in Srinagar Koshur. Journal of Linguistics 48. 427–72. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022226712000096.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olza Zubiri, Jesús, Nuni, Conchita Chapi, de & Tube, Juan. 2002. Gramática Moja ignaciana. Caracas: Universidad Católica Andres Bello.Google Scholar
Ott, Willis & Ott, Rebecca. 1983. Diccionario ignaciano y castellano, con apuntes gramaticales, 2 vols. Cochabamba: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.Google Scholar
Overall, Simon. 2007. A grammar of Aguaruna. Melbourne: La Trobe University dissertation.Google Scholar
Payne, David. 1990. Accent in Aguaruna. In Payne, Doris (ed.), Amazonian linguistics. Studies in Lowland South American languages. 161–84. Austin: University of Texas Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peña, Jaime Germán. 2015. A grammar of Wampis. Eugene, OR: University of Oregon dissertation.Google Scholar
Piggott, Glyne L. 1974 [1980], Aspects of Odawa morphophonemics. New York: Garland.Google Scholar
Prince, Alan & Smolensky, Paul. 1993. Optimality Theory: Constraint interaction in Generative Grammar. Rutgers Center for Cognitive Science.Google Scholar
Rose, Françoise. 2008. The word-prosodic system of Mojeño Trinitario and pervasive vowel deletion. Paper presented at A Estrutura de Línguas Amazônicas: Fonologia e Gramática II, Recife.Google Scholar
Rose, Françoise. 2014. When vowel deletion blurs reduplication in Mojeño Trinitario. In Gómez, Gale Goodwin & van, Hein Voort, der (eds.), Reduplication in South-American languages (Brill's Studies in the Indigenous Languages of the Americas 7). 375–99. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Rose, Françoise. 2015a. Innovative complexity in the pronominal paradigm of Mojeño. A result of contact? In Gardani, Francesco, Arkadiev, Peter & Amiridze, Nino (eds.), Borrowed morphology (Language Contact and Bilingualism 8), 241–67. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.Google Scholar
Rose, Françoise. 2015b. Mojeño Trinitario. In Crevels, Mily & Muysken, Peter (eds.), Lenguas de Bolivia, vol. 3. Oriente. 5997. La Paz: Plural Editores.Google Scholar
Saito, Akira. 2009. “Fighting against a hydra”: Jesuit language policy in Moxos. In Kawamura, Shinzo & Veliath, Cyril (eds.), Beyond the borders: Global perspective of Jesuit mission history. 350–63. Tokyo: Sophia University Press.Google Scholar
Selkirk, Elisabeth. 2003. The prosodic structure of function words. In McCarthy, John J. (ed.), Optimality Theory in phonology: A reader. Hoboken, NJ: Blackwell Publishing.Google Scholar
Topintzi, Nina. 2010. Onsets: Suprasegmental and prosodic behaviour. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willett, Elizabeth. 1982. Reduplication and accent in Southeastern Tepehuan. International Journal of American Linguistics 48 (2). 164–84. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1264679.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willett, Thomas. 1988. A cross-linguistic survey of the grammaticalization of evidentiality. Studies in Language 12 (1). 5197. https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.12.1.04wil.CrossRefGoogle Scholar