tsev av
a word from Vocabulary White Hmong
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Word form
Word form
Orthography White Hmong entries in this field appear in the Romanized Popular Alphabet designed by linguists working in Laos and Thailand in the 1950s. It is more widely used than any other orthography by White Hmong people in the diaspora. For the most part, the values of the symbols are what one would expect (so <c> is in fact a voiceless palatal stop and <q> is in fact a voiceless uvular stop), with the following exceptions: 1) Since there is only one possible final consonant in a Hmong word—[ŋ]—consonant symbols in word-final position have been used to indicate tones: high level <-b>, high falling <-j>, mid rising <-v>, low level <-s>, mid level <-ø>, falling breathy <-g>, and low creaky <-m>. 2) The final [ŋ] is indicated by a doubling of the vowel: <-oo-> is thus [oŋ]. 3) Certain symbols have special values: s [ʃ] x [s] xy [ɕ] ts [tʃ] tx [ts] r [ʈ] g [ŋ] w [ɯ] 4) In prenasalized clusters, the nasal is always written <n>, even though it assimilates to the following consonant (npua ‘pig’ is thus pronounced [mpua]). Additional writing conventions (users of the RPA orthography differ in these practices) 1) No space is used between morphemes if that is the conservative spelling convention (dabtsi ‘what’, pojniam ‘wife’, menyuam ‘child’) 2) A hyphen is used between morphemes if the word a. has an affix (typically, a prefix) b. is a phonological unit: the tone of the first word has changed the tone of the second c. is an expressive: the form of each morpheme is dependent on the form of the other d. is a reduplication 3) In all other cases, a space is inserted between two morphemes, even if it is judged to be a compound either because the meaning of the whole cannot be deduced from the meaning of its parts, or because the two members of the compound are synonyms. |
tsev av |
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| LWT meaning(s): | |
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Analyzability
Analyzability
1) A two-word entry is labeled analyzable derived if a. the first morpheme is a noun class prefix or a reciprocal b. the last morpheme is the Chinese nominal suffix txwm c. it is an expressive (derived by rule) d. it is a reduplication (derived by rule) 2) A two-word entry is labeled an analyzable compound if a. no space is used between morphemes in conventional spelling b. it is a phonological unit: the tone of the first word has changed the tone of the second c. the meaning of the whole cannot be deduced from the meaning of the individual words (even though the meaning of the words seems to be clear) d. the two words are synonyms 3) All other entries of two or more morphemes are labeled analyzable phrasal. This is somewhat arbitrary: for example, pas dej ‘pool water’ is called a phrase because does not pass any of the tests in (2) above, but it often acts as a unit, and is what anyone will give as the equivalent of ‘lake’. |
analyzable phrasal |
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Gloss
Gloss
Use of “?” A question mark is entered in lieu of a gloss for a morpheme or a compound where the morpheme or both components of the compound are completely opaque, such as foom koob hmoov ‘to bless’ [seal/fix + ?-good.luck], where only koob is opaque, or kab laug-sab ‘a spider that makes a web’ [bug + ?], where both laug and sab are opaque. |
tsev + av [house + soil] |
| Age: | no information |
