된소리의 발달

The tense obstruents dealt with in this paper are /pˈ, tˈ, kˈ, sˈ/ which developed before the end of the 15th century and made the cosonant system virtually the same as that of present-day Korean. When the Korean alphabet was invented in 1443, /sˈ/ already existed. The most plausible hypothesis for...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in언어학 no. 95; pp. 3 - 30
Main Author 고광모(Kwang-mo Ko)
Format Journal Article
LanguageKorean
Published 사단법인 한국언어학회 01.04.2023
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1225-7494
2508-4429
DOI10.17290/jlsk.2023..95.3

Cover

Abstract The tense obstruents dealt with in this paper are /pˈ, tˈ, kˈ, sˈ/ which developed before the end of the 15th century and made the cosonant system virtually the same as that of present-day Korean. When the Korean alphabet was invented in 1443, /sˈ/ already existed. The most plausible hypothesis for the development of /sˈ/ is that it has developed as initial geminate /ss/ from #sVsV due to syncope of the first vowel. It is supposed that /pˈ, tˈ, kˈ/ have developed as geminates /pp, tt, kk/ from the clusters /sp, st, sk/, respectively, initial ones during the second half of the 15th century, and medial ones towards the end of the 15th century, which dates are estimated in this paper. The most important aim of the paper is to explain the change of the clusters /sp, st, sk/ into /pp, tt, kk/. Let us begin with the medial ones. The syllable-final /s/ changed into /t/ in the early 16th century, so the series of intervocalic changes /sp, st, sk/>/tp, tt, tk/>/pp, tt, kk/ appear to be beyond question. The first is the syllable-final change /s/>/t/ and the second is place assimilation. For example, /əskəj/>/ətkəj/>/əkkəj/ ‘shoulder' looks as if perfect. However, the syllable-final change /s/>/t/ raises a big question, since, as a one-step change, [s]>[t ̚] is not understandable. So I have set up [st ̚] as an intermediate stage in a previous paper. Thus the syllable-final change in question, I think, is [s]>[st ̚]>[t ̚]. The [st ̚] is not a cluster but a complex segment that begins as a fricative and ends as an unreleased stop. Now I set up [st ̚] also for the change of the medial clusters /sp, st, sk/ into /pp, tt, kk/. This change can be represented as (1), and the syllable-final change /s/>/t/ as (2). (1) a. [sp]>[st ̚p]>[spp]>[pp] b. [st]>[st ̚t]>[tt] c. [sk]>[st ̚k]>[skk]>[kk] (2) a. [sp]>[st ̚p]>[tp] b. [st]>[st ̚t]>[tt] c. [sk]>[st ̚k]>[tk] d. [s]>[st ̚]>[t ̚] (before a pause) Roughly speaking, (1) represents the case of intra-morphemic clusters and (2) the case of inter-morphemic ones. In (1) the stop part of [st ̚] underwent place assimilation, but in (2) the assimilation was blocked by morpheme boundaries or there was no trigger. It is naturally supposed that (1) and (2) were initiated together but (2) was completed later than (1) because in the case of (2) deletion of [s] was delayed due to the influence of [s] of pre-vocalic allomorphs. Needless to say, this order cannot be compatible with the above-mentioned series of changes /sp, st, sk/>/tp, tt, tk/>/pp, tt, kk/. There is supporting evidence. That is, spellings that are in accord with the above supposition are found in documents of the early 16th century, which fact is presented for the first time in this paper. Now we can believe the reality of the complex segment [st ̚] set up by me. Thus there is no reason to think that the initial clusters /sp, st, sk/ have changed into /pp, tt, kk/ in a different way from (1). KCI Citation Count: 2
AbstractList The tense obstruents dealt with in this paper are /pˈ, tˈ, kˈ, sˈ/ which developed before the end of the 15th century and made the cosonant system virtually the same as that of present-day Korean. When the Korean alphabet was invented in 1443, /sˈ/ already existed. The most plausible hypothesis for the development of /sˈ/ is that it has developed as initial geminate /ss/ from #sVsV due to syncope of the first vowel. It is supposed that /pˈ, tˈ, kˈ/ have developed as geminates /pp, tt, kk/ from the clusters /sp, st, sk/, respectively, initial ones during the second half of the 15th century, and medial ones towards the end of the 15th century, which dates are estimated in this paper. The most important aim of the paper is to explain the change of the clusters /sp, st, sk/ into /pp, tt, kk/. Let us begin with the medial ones. The syllable-final /s/ changed into /t/ in the early 16th century, so the series of intervocalic changes /sp, st, sk/>/tp, tt, tk/>/pp, tt, kk/ appear to be beyond question. The first is the syllable-final change /s/>/t/ and the second is place assimilation. For example, /əskəj/>/ətkəj/>/əkkəj/ ‘shoulder' looks as if perfect. However, the syllable-final change /s/>/t/ raises a big question, since, as a one-step change, [s]>[t ̚] is not understandable. So I have set up [st ̚] as an intermediate stage in a previous paper. Thus the syllable-final change in question, I think, is [s]>[st ̚]>[t ̚]. The [st ̚] is not a cluster but a complex segment that begins as a fricative and ends as an unreleased stop. Now I set up [st ̚] also for the change of the medial clusters /sp, st, sk/ into /pp, tt, kk/. This change can be represented as (1), and the syllable-final change /s/>/t/ as (2). (1) a. [sp]>[st ̚p]>[spp]>[pp] b. [st]>[st ̚t]>[tt] c. [sk]>[st ̚k]>[skk]>[kk] (2) a. [sp]>[st ̚p]>[tp] b. [st]>[st ̚t]>[tt] c. [sk]>[st ̚k]>[tk] d. [s]>[st ̚]>[t ̚] (before a pause) Roughly speaking, (1) represents the case of intra-morphemic clusters and (2) the case of inter-morphemic ones. In (1) the stop part of [st ̚] underwent place assimilation, but in (2) the assimilation was blocked by morpheme boundaries or there was no trigger. It is naturally supposed that (1) and (2) were initiated together but (2) was completed later than (1) because in the case of (2) deletion of [s] was delayed due to the influence of [s] of pre-vocalic allomorphs. Needless to say, this order cannot be compatible with the above-mentioned series of changes /sp, st, sk/>/tp, tt, tk/>/pp, tt, kk/. There is supporting evidence. That is, spellings that are in accord with the above supposition are found in documents of the early 16th century, which fact is presented for the first time in this paper. Now we can believe the reality of the complex segment [st ̚] set up by me. Thus there is no reason to think that the initial clusters /sp, st, sk/ have changed into /pp, tt, kk/ in a different way from (1). KCI Citation Count: 2
Author 고광모(Kwang-mo Ko)
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  fullname: 고광모(Kwang-mo Ko)
BackLink https://www.kci.go.kr/kciportal/ci/sereArticleSearch/ciSereArtiView.kci?sereArticleSearchBean.artiId=ART002954924$$DAccess content in National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF)
BookMark eNotjrFOwzAURS1UJELpxMLIwoKU8PxsJ_ZYlUIrVVRC2S3bcVBISVAiBn6ABQZGhrIydeC_0o9oBJ3OHa7uPcdkUNWVJ-SMQkQTVHD1uGrLCAFZFCkRsQMSoAAZco5qQAKKKMKEK35ERm1bWAAKUjHGA3Lafa63bx_dz2b7_XXe_a67980JOczNqvWjPYckvZmmk1m4WN7OJ-NFWMVChbGzCDaRJpHoPJdWeuYs73WMAUFjzjKeCQkmcwhCOiMyI3LqJFLbf3s2JJf_s1WT69IVujbFHx9qXTZ6fJ_ONQXE3jbuyxf78ktTPPmsMPq5D6Z51XfL6ymlHHiMiu0AUqpRWA
ContentType Journal Article
DBID DBRKI
TDB
ACYCR
DOI 10.17290/jlsk.2023..95.3
DatabaseName DBPIA - 디비피아
Nurimedia DBPIA Journals
Korean Citation Index
DatabaseTitleList
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
DocumentTitleAlternate The Development of Tense Obstruents in Korean
DocumentTitle_FL The Development of Tense Obstruents in Korean
EISSN 2508-4429
EndPage 30
ExternalDocumentID oai_kci_go_kr_ARTI_10220016
NODE11404629
GroupedDBID DBRKI
M~E
TDB
ACYCR
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-n659-6cb20b78a782ce48b8e3cb4729aa051643d4d580adc2058ca5da5f1c821b933e3
ISSN 1225-7494
IngestDate Fri Jan 26 03:33:57 EST 2024
Thu Feb 06 12:47:59 EST 2025
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly true
Issue 95
Keywords tense obstruent
place assimilation
consonant cluster
geminate
Language Korean
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-n659-6cb20b78a782ce48b8e3cb4729aa051643d4d580adc2058ca5da5f1c821b933e3
PageCount 28
ParticipantIDs nrf_kci_oai_kci_go_kr_ARTI_10220016
nurimedia_primary_NODE11404629
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2023-04
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2023-04-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 04
  year: 2023
  text: 2023-04
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationTitle 언어학
PublicationYear 2023
Publisher 사단법인 한국언어학회
Publisher_xml – name: 사단법인 한국언어학회
SSID ssib001089334
ssib001149716
ssib001128315
ssib044736041
ssib009283417
ssib021436044
Score 2.2302814
Snippet The tense obstruents dealt with in this paper are /pˈ, tˈ, kˈ, sˈ/ which developed before the end of the 15th century and made the cosonant system virtually...
SourceID nrf
nurimedia
SourceType Open Website
Publisher
StartPage 3
SubjectTerms 언어학
Title 된소리의 발달
URI https://www.dbpia.co.kr/journal/articleDetail?nodeId=NODE11404629
https://www.kci.go.kr/kciportal/ci/sereArticleSearch/ciSereArtiView.kci?sereArticleSearchBean.artiId=ART002954924
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
ispartofPNX 언어학, 2023, 0(95), , pp.3-30
journalDatabaseRights – providerCode: PRVHPJ
  databaseName: ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
  customDbUrl:
  eissn: 2508-4429
  dateEnd: 99991231
  omitProxy: true
  ssIdentifier: ssib044736041
  issn: 1225-7494
  databaseCode: M~E
  dateStart: 19790101
  isFulltext: true
  titleUrlDefault: https://road.issn.org
  providerName: ISSN International Centre
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV07j9QwELaWo4AG8RTHwWklcHVKSBzbscskG3RwuqNZpOuixElOsJA97e0KiYKSBgpKiqOluoL_tfcjmHH2ER7i1WSdiRN_3rEm3zj2DCEPyjI3AoiC4xUYVJuFwlFBYBwR5OA010yJCjc47x_I3Wf8yaE47PWOO6uWZtPCNW9-ua_kf7QKMtAr7pL9B82uHgoCKIN-4QgahuNf6ZimMdUe1QlNE6okVQlKIkkjK9EDqtUOiuK2UkwVXE66hNTWkzRWywKnKdwmqF7NENA0onFAI88WONW-bSWikQJ6uvc6b46cV-OdvfFyVmExicCCztoTVLtFySy4Fomy2Bg218KNEW7bfGJbEzQa_AaiLUTQ745tZZg5l7c5jd3KyoCAKYfzBbx2qGnRMahB583cfsD5yeaDe4CrJF-8PBm52DfX1cIN1u-31arDg6eD1MdwQpLpC-QiC6XEnBf7b9OOgwz87buAeUC_OoQJbseYW6tzDZf52kFkwD6ltyZMnId4br3-Ze8X38oR9cMfMAO_aSZAiy41M8ztAAaiw3WGV8mVhZPSj9oRd430RuMb5Pr84-n5uw_zL2fnnz_1519P5-_PbpLho3SY7DqLlBpOI4V2pCmYV4QqB15oKq4KVQWm4IAlz8E6AzsteSmUl5eGeUKZXJS5qH2jmF_A_1IFt8hGM26q26TPtAHnjAuvCjQvVK2qkMlaaq_WXumX4Sa5D33JRuZ5hhHM8fdonI0mGfhpjzOcZ0BvY5Nsr_qaHbfxVbKunu78qcIWubwe0HfJxnQyq-4BT5wW21a13wAl0kOy
linkProvider ISSN International Centre
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=%EB%90%9C%EC%86%8C%EB%A6%AC%EC%9D%98+%EB%B0%9C%EB%8B%AC&rft.jtitle=%EC%96%B8%EC%96%B4%ED%95%99&rft.au=%EA%B3%A0%EA%B4%91%EB%AA%A8%28Kwang-mo+Ko%29&rft.date=2023-04-01&rft.pub=%EC%82%AC%EB%8B%A8%EB%B2%95%EC%9D%B8+%ED%95%9C%EA%B5%AD%EC%96%B8%EC%96%B4%ED%95%99%ED%9A%8C&rft.issn=1225-7494&rft.eissn=2508-4429&rft.issue=95&rft.spage=3&rft.epage=30&rft_id=info:doi/10.17290%2Fjlsk.2023..95.3&rft.externalDocID=NODE11404629
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1225-7494&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1225-7494&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1225-7494&client=summon