The Five Diphthongs of Modern French

Authors

  • John Hewson Memorial University of Newfoundland

Abstract

The fact that French troua must be pronounced [trua] whereas trois must be pronounced [trwa] leads some to the conclusion that [w] has separate phonemic status in French. A different view, advanced in a little known paper by Arnold in 1951, indicates that the segments [wa] and [ui] are diphthongs, and that wherever [w] is required it is always as the on-glide of /wa/ and has no phonemic status by itself. This makes sense not only synchronically, but also diachronically, and there is further historical evidence for a total of five diphthongs in Modern French: /wa, ui, je, we, je/.

Published

1982-06-06

How to Cite

Hewson, J. (1982). The Five Diphthongs of Modern French. Papers from the Annual Meetings of the Atlantic Provinces Linguistic Association (PAMAPLA) ACTES DES COLLOQUES ANNUELS DE L’ASSOCIATION DE LINGUISTIQUE DES PROVINCES ATLANTIQUES (ACAALPA)., 5, 128–135. Retrieved from https://conferences.lib.unb.ca/index.php/pamapla/article/view/521

Conference Proceedings Volume

Section

Papers / Présentations