Kenneth S. Olson

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Current Research

Documentation of digital wordlists

Kenneth Olson conducts research on best practices for the documentation of wordlists that include audio recordings, including issues of archiving and present-day access. To date, he has co-published two wordlists in online open-access linguistics journals (see below).

Key publications on digital wordlists

The Labiodental Flap

labiodental flap

Kenneth Olson conducts research (along with John Hajek of the University of Melbourne) on the labiodental flap, a speech sound found mostly in the north central part of Africa. The research includes documenting its geographic and genetic distribution, studying its articulatory and acoustic features, and examining its phonological status. A labiodental articulation is most common cross-linguistically, but a bilabial variety is also attested (e.g. in the Mono language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo). The term labial flap encompasses both the labiodental and bilabial articulations.

In May 2005 the Council of the International Phonetic Association voted to adopt a symbol for the labiodental flap. The symbol they chose is the right-hook v, shown above.

The right-hook v symbol was added to Unicode in version 5.1 at code point U+2C71. Fonts that includes the symbol at this code point include Doulos SIL, Charis SIL, and Code2000. The Unicode name for the symbol is latin small letter v with right hook. Note that this is different from the latin small letter v with hook symbol at code point U+028B. The right-hook v character is similar to the Cyrillic small letter izhitsa (U+0475).

The current Braille IPA draft, developed by Robert Englebretson in conjunction with the International Council on English Braille, contains the labiodental flap (dots 235–1236).

The first known mention of the labiodental flap in the literature was in 1907 by the French Catholic missionary Pierre Cotel, who worked in what is present-day Central African Republic. In his small grammar and dictionary of the Togbo dialect of Banda, Cotel describes a sound that "se prononce en faisant rentrer la lèvre inférieure sous les incisives de la mâchoire supérieure" (p. x).

The first known use of the right-hook v symbol to represent the labiodental flap sound was in a 1988 article by Didier Demolin in the Belgian Journal of Linguistics. Demolin's tentative description of the articulation of the sound in this article was refined in his later work.

Key publications on the labiodental flap

The Mono language

Mono regions

Kenneth Olson conducts research on the Mono language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Mono is a Banda language, part of the larger Ubangian language group. The ISO 639–3 code (aka "Ethnologue code") for Mono is [mnh].

The Phonology of Mono

Olson's book, The Phonology of Mono, describes the sound system of Mono. It can be ordered from the SIL International Academic Bookstore. To order, click here. A CD containing the audio recordings that accompany the book may be ordered by contacting the author directly.

Key publications on Mono

Niger-Congo Classification

Kenneth Olson conducts research on the classification of the Niger-Congo language family. Niger-Congo contains an estimated 1,500 languages, i.e. about one-fifth of the world's languages. The name "Niger-Congo" is from the two major rivers in the region.

The Niger-Congo languages cover most of sub-Saharan Africa. The northern border of the family stretches along a line between Senegal in the west and Kenya in the east. In the extreme southern part of the continent, Niger-Congo languages are intermingled with languages from the Khoisan family. The large Bantu subgroup of Niger-Congo covers most of Africa south of the equator.

Key publications on Niger-Congo



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E-mail address: ken1 (AT) awuka.com
Copyright © 2008 Kenneth S. Olson.