5. Final Consonants: Difference between revisions

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== .4 ==
== .4 ==
<BR><BR>Click here to go to the front page of the [[Second Edition of H.A. Jaeschke's 'Tibetan Grammar']]

Revision as of 15:51, 26 January 2006


.1

Only the following ten: ga nga da na ba ma 'a ra la sa (and the four with affixed sa, v. 5.5) occur at the end of a syllable.

.2

It must be observed, that ga da ba as finals are never pronounced like the English g, d, b in leg, bad, cab, but are transformed differently in the different provinces. In Ladak they sound like k, t, p e.g. sog = sock, god = got, thob = top.

.3

In all Central Tibet, moreover, final da and na, sometimes even la, modify the sound of a preceeding vowel: a to ae (similar to the English a in hare, man), o to oe (French eu in jeu), u into ue (French u in mur). In most of the other provinces ga and da are uttered so indistinctly as to be scarcely audible, so that sog, god become so, go. In Tsang even final la is scarcely perceptible, and final ga, particularly after o, is almost dissolved into a vowel sound = a:sol ba so-wa, dkon mchog kon-choa.

.4



Click here to go to the front page of the Second Edition of H.A. Jaeschke's 'Tibetan Grammar'