Title: 4.2. Imagic Icons
14.2. Imagic Icons
- Explanations for Magnitude Sound Symbolism
- High, front vowels (such as i) are associated
with smallness (and related notions) low, back
vowels (such as a, u) are associated with
largeness (and related notions). - Explanations Articulatory and acoustic
- Articulatory configurations of vowels
- Sapir (1929), Paget (1930), Bolinger (1968) The
size of the mouth cavity ... is matched with the
meaning. The small oral volume of i and
larger oral volume of u or a are responsible
for a kinesthetic impression of size associated
with different vowels.
24.2. Imagic Icons
- Peterfalvi (1965) The further you penetrate the
body, the darker it is there. - Darkness/brightness of vowels are associated
with large and small size, respectively. - Brown (1958)
- Large objects usually produce dark (low
frequency) sounds when pushed or moved in certain
ways, whereas small objects produce bright (high
frequency) sounds.
34.2. Imagic Icons
- Limitation of the explanations based on
articulatory configurations - Pitches and consonants?
- High tones (with higher F0), voiceless obstruents
(consonants formed by obstructing outward
airflow, causing increased air pressure in the
vocal tract subdivided into plosives,
fricatives, and affricates), dental, alveolar,
palatal and front velars (with higher frequencies
of bursts, frication noise and/or formant
transitions) are associated with SMALLNESS. Low
tones (with lower F0), voiced consonants, labials
and back velars (with lower frequency) are
associated with LARGENESS.
44.2. Imagic Icons
- Acoustic The Frequency Code Theory
- John Ohala (1982, 1994)
- A general frequency code explains several types
of size (magnitude) sound symbolism high
frequency sounds connote small size, due to the
fact that small animals make high frequency
sounds and large animals make low frequency
sounds. - The potential to unify claims for magnitude
symbolism in vowels, consonants, tones, and
intonation. - vocalizations by dominant and aggressive
individuals are low-pitched, whereas
vocalizations by submissive individuals are
high-pitched.
54.2. Imagic Icons
- Lower pitch larger
- Animals in competition for some resource attempt
to intimidate their opponent by trying to appear
as large as possible. - Body size (or apparent size)
- The F0 of voice the size of the signaler
- F0 is inversely related to the mass of the
vibrating membrane (vocal cords in mammals),
which, in turn, is correlated with overall body
mass. - High F0 to seem small and non-threatening
- Animal females are smaller in body size and vocal
organ than males.
64.2. Imagic Icons
- The adult male larynx 50 larger than the adult
females in the anterior-posterior dimension - ? lower F0
- The male larynx also lower in the throat than
the females, - making the vocal tract about 15-20 longer.
- ? lower resonances
74.2. Imagic Icons
- A lower F0 ? a larger vocalizer ? related
concepts such as aggression, dominance, and other
related concepts, such as assertiveness,
confidence, importance, etc - A higher F0 ? appeasement, submission, and
related concepts in the opposite direction, such
as social subordinacy, politeness, non-threat.
84.2. Imagic Icons
- SMALLNESS / LARGENESS related notions
- S feminine L masculine
- S friendly L aggressive
- S lovely, affectionate L formidable
- S familiar L unfamiliar
- S simple L complex
- S informal, casual L formal, rigid
- S uncertain, flimsy, less confident - certain,
firm, confident - S faster L slower
- S near L far
-
94.2. Imagic Icons
- The Frequency Code Manifestations in Pitch (F0)
- 1. Intonation
- Languages use high and/or rising F0 to mark
questions and low and/or falling F0 to mark
statements. - High and/or rising F0 ? deference, politeness,
submission, lack of confidence - Low/or falling F0 ? assertiveness, authority,
aggression, confidence, threat. - ??????
- ???! ?
- ??? ?
- ??! ?
104.2. Imagic Icons
- 2. Tone Changes in Cantonese (F0)
- Tone sandhi In Guangzhou Cantonese
- ???? 53 53 gt 55 53
- example ?53 ?53 gt ?55?53
- ???? 53 55 gt 55 55
- example ?53 ?55 gt ?55?55
- In Hong Kong Cantonese no tone sandhi
- The ?? pinj?m (tone change) phenomenon in
Cantonese - 55 ????21 gt ?55
- 35 ????21 gt ?35
- ?? refers to a very particular tone change in
Cantonese which affects the original meaning of a
word with an unchanged base tone in a systematic
way. - small things or familiar things one often
speaks of
114.2. Imagic Icons
- ?21 gt ???55 (only one person, one person alone)
- ?21 gt ???55 (that person, with derogatory,
contemptuous sense) - ??21 gt ???35???35
- ?21 in its base tone means sugar
- ?35 means candy
- Derivation of ??
- ??from a ?? tone is almost always high level
(55) - ?? from ???????? tones is almost always high
rising (35)
124.2. Imagic Icons
Original Tone Example of underlying word Example of 55 ?? Example of 35 ??
?? 55 (53) ?55 smoke (in general) ?55 smoke (of tobacco)
?? 21 (11) ?21 sugar ?21 writing, literature ?55 a cash, a dollar ?35 candy
(?? 35) --- --- ---
?? 23 (13) ?23 woman, female ?35 daughter
?? 33 ?33 appearance ?35 portrait
?? 22 ?33 kind, sort ?35 manner
??? 55 (53) ?53 black ?55 pigeon ?55 black ??35 white pigeon
??? 33 ?33 pagoda ?35 pagoda
?? 22 ?22 honey ?35 bee
134.2. Imagic Icons
- Characteristics of ??
- (1) Some of the ?? words have diminutive senses
(small things, familiar things, unimportant
things, lovely things) - ??21???21 ---- ??35(??)???35
- ?21 sugar --- ?35 candy
- ?23 woman, female --- ?35 daughter
- ??33 --- ??35
- ??21 ---- ???35???35??35?
- ????????????????????
- (2) ?? tends to occur in nouns, and it usually
occurs on the last syllable of a noun. - ??21 gt ??35
- ??21 gt ??35
- ??21 gt ??35
- ??????????????????????????????????????????????????
??????
144.2. Imagic Icons
- ?? in Cantonese and ?? in Mandarin
- The retroflex suffix ? in Mandarin
(???suffixation ??). - The major characteristics of ?? in Mandarin
- (1) ?? words often have diminutive senses (small
things, familiar things, unimportant things,
lovely things) - e.g. ?? gt ???
- (2) ?? tends to occur in nouns, and it usually
occurs on the last syllable of a noun. - e.g. ?(to draw, verb) gt ?? (drawing, picture,
noun) - ???
- ???
- ?21 yellow gt ?35 yolk (Cantonese)
- ? yellow gt ?? yolk (Mandarin)
- ? cap gt ?35 small cap (Cantonese)
- ? cap gt ?? small cap (Mandarin)
- nominalization marker, diminutive marker
154.2. Imagic Icons
- ?????? ?????? (11) -- ????? ??????? (35)
- ?? (22) -- ??? (35)
- ??? (11) -- ?? (35)
- ??? (11) -- ?? (35)
- ??? (11) -- ?? (35)
- ? (11) -- ?? (35)??? (35)??? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ??? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ??? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ??? (35)
- ??? (22) -- ??? (35)
- ?? (33) -- ?????? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ?? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ?? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ?? (35)
164.2. Imagic Icons
- ?? (11) -- ?? (35)
- ???? (11) -- ?? (35)
- ??? (22) -- ??? (35)
- ?? (13) -- ?? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ?????? (35)
- ?? (11) -- ?? (35)
174.2. Imagic Icons
- The Frequency Code Manifestations in Vowels (F2)
- 1. Diminutives in English
- A diminutive lt Latin deminuere to lessen is a
formation of a word used to convey a slight
degree of the root meaning, smallness of the
object named, intimacy, or endearment. - A comparison of diminutive forms in Mandarin,
Cantonese, and English ????
Sound Symbolic? F0 F2
Mandarin suffix ? ? -- --
Cantonese ? Yes Yes No
English suffixes Yes No Yes
184.2. Imagic Icons
- English diminutives --
- The most common form diminutive ending, a
syllable tacked on to the end of a name that
signifies little and related concepts. - (1) let lit (small, unimportant things lt Old
French -elet) - booklet, piglet, leaflet, starlet, craterlet,
riverlet - (2) ette et (small, inferior things, female lt
Old French, feminine of -et) - kitchenette, cigarette, diskette (small things),
leatherette (imitation, inferior thing),
usherette, majorette (female) - (3) ess is (female) lt Old French -esse
- lioness, waitress, actress, authoress, manageress
- (4) ling (one that is young, small, or inferior)
- duckling, princeling (a prince judged to be of
minor status or importance), weakling, hireling,
underling (one of lesser rank or authority than
another)
194.2. Imagic Icons
- (5) ee i (small, passive) lt French passive
participle ending é - bootee (a soft, usually knitted shoe for a baby),
employee, trainee, nominee - (6) y, ie i (indicating smallness, intimacy,
familiarity, endearment, etc) - kitty, pussy, puppy, doggy, movies, undies,
nighty (nightie), daddy, mummy, aunty (auntie),
Aussy, - English nicknames
- Rebert Bob (truncated) Bobby (diminutive)
- Magerate Mag (truncated) Maggy (diminutive)
- Albert gt Bertie
- Barbara gt ?Barbie
- Amanda gt Mandy
- Andrew gt Andy
204.2. Imagic Icons
- Albert gt Bertie
- Barbara gt ?Barbie
- Amanda gt Mandy
- Andrew gt Andy
- Charles gt Charlie
- Patricia gt Patty
- Angela gt Angie
- Anna gt Annie
- Bernard gt ?Bernie
- James gt Jimmy
- Elizabeth gt Betty
- Frances gt Fanny
- John gt Johnny
214.2. Imagic Icons
Language feminine diminutive
English major majorette dinner dinette
Hebrew axyan nephew axyanit niece mapa tablecloth mapit napkin
Hindi ghanta bell ghanti small bell
Dizi dad boy dade girl kiemu pot kieme small pot
Mongolian noyan prince noyiqan princess ula?n red ulu?aqan red (of nice little things
- Female given names in Chinese
- ?fen??feng??xin??yi??yi??ling??lin??min??ying??jie
??jing??jing??si??ting??li??si??xin??xin??xing??yi
n??zhi??zhi - Female referents in Chinese
- ?qi??qie??ji??(?)ji??jie??zi??jin??mei??yi??bi??bi
??pin??ni??mei??e??di
224.2. Imagic Icons
- 2. Demonstratives
- Words with higher F2 proximal (near)
- Words with lower F2 distal (far)
- Cantonese ni (proximal) ko (distal)
- Mandarin zhe (proximal) na (distal)
- English this (proximal) that (distal)
- German diese (proximal) das (distal)
- Dutch dit (proximal) dat (distal)
- Chinook (Amerindian) i (proxmial) u (distal)
- Maya (Amerindian) li (proxmial) la (distal)
- Tamil idi (proximal) adi (distal)
- Thai nii (proximal) nan (distal)
- Burmese dil (proximal) thoo (distal)
234.2. Imagic Icons
- Traunmüllers (1996) statistics i gt e gt a gt o gt
u - Among these cases, 32 supported our hypothesis
and there were only 4 counterexamples. We can be
highly confident in this hypothesis, since the
binomial probability of observing no more than 4
counterexamples among 36 cases is only 1.1 10-7.
Table 1 shows the distribution of the vowels in
the sample. - Chinese Yue, Hakka, Wu (download here)