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Universal 796: voiced obstruent ⇒ unvoiced obstruent
- Original
- The presence of a voiced obstruent in a given language is most likely to imply the presence of its voiceless cognate.
- Standardized
- IF there is a voiced obstruent, THEN most likely its voiceless counterpart is present as well.
- Keywords
- consonant, obstruent, voice
- Domain
- phonology
- Type
- implication
- Status
- achronic
- Quality
- statistical
- Basis
- 317 language sample from Nartey 1979
- Source
- Nartey 1979: 37
- Counterexamples
- Indo-European: Breton (Celtic), Norwegian (Germanic), Persian (Indo-Iranian); Amerind: Klamath (Klamath-Modoc), Tsimshian (Tsimshianic), Woodland Cree (Algonquian, Algic), Coast Wiyot (Ritwan, Algic);Kato, Mattole, Wailaki (all Athabaskan);Altaic: Mongolian (Mongolian), Turkish (Turkic);Papuan: Selepet, Gadsup (both Trans-New Guinea), Rotokas (E. Papuan);Australian: Muang (Yiwaidjan), Tiwi, Alawa (both Maran);Somali (Cushitic, Afro-Asiatic); Berta (E. Central Sudanic, Nilo-Saharan); Lak (East Caucasian), Tunica (isolate remotely related to Algonquian) (Nartey 1979: 37)
Cf. more restrictive claims ##187, 412, 773, 785, 798, 839, 921, 922, 935, 1344, 1807, 1809, 1829, 1843.