Vietnamese (6): a bit of ngôn ngữ học

[image error]The pronunciation of Vietnamese is hard for several reasons. Every syllable carries one of six tones, indicated by five special accents (à, ả, ã, á, ạ) that turn Vietnamese writing into equal parts text and score. The numerous different vowels and diphthongs are no piece of cake either. To give just one example: the language has a shorter and a longer ‘uh’ sound (spelt as â and ơ respectively).


But while these things look intimidating right from the start, something unexpectedly treacherous lurks behind the seemingly innocuous letter combination ng. As in English and other Germanic languages, this pair stands for the sound heard in sing and singer; the phonetic symbol is ŋ. In Vietnamese, however, this sound can also appear at the beginning of a word, as in ngai for ‘throne’. We don’t do that in English, or any other European language that I’m aware of for that matter. As a result, it’s surprisingly difficult for us, or for me at any rate, to distinguish words beginning with ng from those beginning with n. And since ngai and nai (‘deer’) have different meanings, ignoring the difference is not an option.


Why should this be so? Is there anything about the beginning of a word that makes it harder to properly hear the /ŋ/? I suspect not. More likely, it’s a matter of expectations: my listening brain is just not prepared for a /ŋ/ to pop up in that particular position.


I got evidence for this hunch when earlier today I heard someone talk about a ‘union-style effort’ – you know, the sort of effort trade unions usually make. Except that he said this in the context of psychology, and I soon realised that the speaker had actually said ‘Jungian-style effort’: an effort along the lines laid down by the psychologist Carl Jung. What those lines are is a matter I have only a hazy notion of, but they’re certainly unrelated to the labour movement.


Union (/junjən/) of course is a much more common word than Jungian /juŋjən/, and words ending in /njən/ (companion, opinion, draconian) are generally much more common than those ending in /ŋjən/ – indeed, I have trouble finding any at all. So what happened is that expecting to hear an n, I heard just that, even though the speaker undoubtedly vocalised ng, that is /ŋ/. At the same time, I’m confident I would have no such trouble distinguishing sinner and singer or winger and winner. I know that these pairs exist, and therefore my expectations wouldn’t lead me astray there.


So while the bad news is that the initial /ŋ/ is one more headache for a European student of Vietnamese, there is good news too: once my brain gets wise to the possibility of /ŋ/ appearing as the initial sound of words, it will probably start listening out for them and at some point catch them. And a good thing too, since the Vietnamese word for linguistics is ngôn ngữ học.


 

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Published on October 16, 2017 02:03
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