Tamil phonology


Tamil phonology is characterised by the presence of retroflex consonants and multiple rhotic consonants. It does not distinguish phonologically between voiced and unvoiced consonants; phonetically, voice is assigned depending on a consonant's position in a word. Tamil phonology permits few consonant clusters, which can never be word initial. Native grammarians classify Tamil phonemes into vowels, consonants, and a "secondary character", the .

Vowels

The vowels are called உயிரெழுத்து . The vowels are classified into short and long and two diphthongs.
The long vowels are about twice as long as the short vowels. The diphthongs are usually pronounced about one and a half times as long as the short vowels, though most grammatical texts place them with the long vowels.
Tamil has two diphthongs ஐ and ஔ, the latter of which is restricted to a few lexical items.

Consonants

The consonants are known as மெய்யெழுத்து . The consonants are classified into three categories with six in each category: vallinam, mellinam, and idayinam. Tamil has very restricted consonant clusters and does not have aspirated stops. Some scholars have suggested that in Chenthamil, stops were voiceless when at the start of a word and voiced allophonically otherwise.
A chart of the Tamil consonant phonemes in the International Phonetic Alphabet follows:
LabialDentalAlveolarRetroflexAlveolo-palatalVelarGlottal
Nasal ம் ந் ன் ண் ஞ் ங்
Stop ப் த் ட் க்
Affricate ச்
Fricative21 ஸ் 22 ஷ்1 ஶ்33 ஹ்
Tapɾ ர்
Trill ற்
Approximant வ் ழ் ய்
Lateral approximant ல் ள்

  1. and are allophones of in some dialects.
  2. and are found only in loanwords and frequently replaced by native sounds.
  3. and are allophones of in some dialects.
The voiceless consonants have multiple allophones, depending on position.
PlaceInitialGeminateIntervocalicPost-nasal
Velar
Palatal
Retroflex
Alveolartːrrr
Dental
Labial

Overview

Unlike Indo-Aryan languages spoken around it, Tamil does not have aspirated consonants. The Tamil script does not have distinct letters for voiced and unvoiced stop, although both are present in the spoken language as allophones—i.e., they are in complementary distribution and the places they can occur do not intersect. For example, the voiceless stop occurs at the beginning of the words and the voiced stop cannot. In the middle of words, voiceless stops commonly occur as a geminated pair like -pp-, while voiced stops usually do not. Only the voiced stops occur after a vowel, or after a corresponding nasal. Thus both the voiced and voiceless stops can be represented by the same script in Tamil without ambiguity, the script denoting only the place and broad manner of articulation. The Tolkāppiyam cites detailed rules as to when a letter is to be pronounced with voice and when it is to be pronounced unvoiced. The rule is identical for all stops.
With the exception of one rule - the pronunciation of the letter c at the beginning of a word - these rules are largely followed even today in pronouncing centamiḻ. The position is, however, much more complex in relation to spoken koduntamil. The pronunciation of southern dialects and the dialects of Sri Lanka continues to reflect these rules to a large extent, though not completely. In northern dialects, however, sound shifts have changed many words so substantially that these rules no longer describe how words are pronounced. In addition many, but not all, Sanskrit loan words are pronounced in Tamil as they were in Sanskrit, even if this means that consonants which should be unvoiced according to the Tolkāppiyam are voiced.
The failure of written Tamil to provide different characters for voiced and unvoiced stops, unlike Indo-European languages and other Dravidian languages, attests that voice did not originally contrast in stops. Voiced stops may have been the result of rules of allophony, elision, or sandhi.

Elision

is the reduction in the duration of sound of a phoneme when preceded by or followed by certain other sounds. There are well-defined rules for elision in Tamil. They are categorised into different classes based on the phoneme which undergoes elision.
1.Kutr iyal ukaram the vowel u
2.Kutr iyal ikaram the vowel i
3.Aiykaara k kurukkam the diphthong ai
4.Oukaara k kurukkam the diphthong au
5.Aaytha k kurukkam the special character akh
6.Makara k kurukkam the phoneme m