Article published In: International Journal of Chinese Linguistics
Vol. 3:2 (2016) ► pp.270–281
A refutation of Song’s (2014) explanation of the ‘stop coda problem’ in Old Chinese
Published online: 20 December 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijchl.3.2.04hil
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijchl.3.2.04hil
Song (2014) draws renewed attention to the problem of groups of Chinese words in which the character used to write one of the words has a stop final reading in Middle Chinese but the character used to write another of the words has an open syllable reading in Middle Chinese, although the two seem to have a shared a rime in Old Chinese. She offers a new solution employing the reconstruction of voiced and voiceless stop finals in the shared ancestor of Chinese and Tibetan. Every step in Song’s reasoning is faulty and nearly every claim she makes about Tibetan is false. Haudricourt long ago solved the ‘stop coda problem’ (1954).
Keywords: Old Chinese, Sino-Tibetan, , historical phonology, Tibetan
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Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Jacques, Guillaume
2021. Review of Hill (2019): The Historical Phonology of Tibetan, Burmese, and Chinese. Journal of Historical Linguistics 11:1 ► pp. 143 ff.
List, Johann-Mattis
Sampson, Geoffrey
2019. An unaddressed phonological contradiction. International Journal of Chinese Linguistics 6:2 ► pp. 221 ff.
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