Bengali phonology


The phonology of Bengali, like that of its neighbouring Eastern Indo-Aryan languages, is characterised by a wide variety of diphthongs and inherent back vowels. corresponds to and developed out of the Sanskrit schwa, which is retained as such by almost all other branches of the Indo-Aryan language family.

Phonemic inventory

, Bengali features 29 consonants and 7 vowels. Each vowel has examples of being nasalized in Bengali words, thus adding 7 more additional nasalized vowels. In the tables below, the sounds are given in IPA.
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Although the standard form of Bengali is largely uniform across West Bengal and Bangladesh, there are a few sounds that vary in pronunciation :

Consonant clusters

Native Bengali words do not allow initial consonant clusters; the maximum syllabic structure is CVC. Many speakers of Bengali restrict their phonology to this pattern, even when using Sanskrit or English borrowings, such as গেরাম geram for গ্রাম gram meaning 'village' or ইস্কুল iskul / ishkul for স্কুল skul 'school'.
Sanskrit words borrowed into Bengali, however, possess a wide range of clusters, expanding the maximum syllable structure to CCCVC. Some of these clusters, such as the in মৃত্যু mrittü or the in স্পষ্ট spôshṭo, have become extremely common, and can be considered permitted consonant clusters in Bengali. English and other foreign borrowings add even more cluster types into the Bengali inventory, further increasing the syllable capacity, as commonly-used loanwords such as ট্রেন ṭren and গ্লাস glash are now included in leading Bengali dictionaries.
Final consonant clusters are rare in Bengali. Most final consonant clusters were borrowed into Bengali from English, as in লিফ্ট lifṭ and ব্যাংক beņk. However, final clusters do exist in some native Bengali words, although rarely in standard pronunciation. One example of a final cluster in a standard Bengali word would be গঞ্জ gônj, which is found in names of hundreds of cities and towns across Bengal, including নবাবগঞ্জ Nôbabgônj and মানিকগঞ্জ Manikgônj. Some nonstandard varieties of Bengali make use of final clusters quite often. For example, in some Purbo dialects, final consonant clusters consisting of a nasal and its corresponding oral stop are common, as in চান্দ chand. The Standard Bengali equivalent of chand would be চাঁদ chãd, with a nasalized vowel instead of the final cluster.

Diphthongs

Magadhan languages such as Bengali are known for their wide variety of diphthongs, or combinations of vowels occurring within the same syllable. Two of these, and, are the only ones with representation in script, as ঐ and ঔ respectively. The semivowels may all form the glide part of a diphthong. The total number of diphthongs is not established, with bounds at 17 and 31. Several vowel combinations can be considered true monosyllabic diphthongs, made up of the main vowel and the trailing vowel. Almost all other vowel combinations are possible, but only across two adjacent syllables, such as the disyllabic vowel combination in কুয়া kua. As many as 25 vowel combinations can be found, but some of the more recent combinations have not passed through the stage between two syllables and a diphthongal monosyllable.

Prosody

Stress

In standard Bengali, stress is predominantly initial. Bengali words are virtually all trochaic; the primary stress falls on the initial syllable of the word, while secondary stress often falls on all odd-numbered syllables thereafter, giving strings such as সহযোগিতা shôhojogita . The first syllable carries the greatest stress, with the third carrying a somewhat weaker stress, and all following odd-numbered syllables carrying very weak stress. However, in words borrowed from Sanskrit, the root syllable has stress, out of harmony with the situation with native Bengali words. Also, in a declarative sentence, the stress is generally lowest on the last word of the sentence.
Adding prefixes to a word typically shifts the stress to the left; for example, while the word সভ্য shobbho carries the primary stress on the first syllable, adding the negative prefix creates অসভ্য ôshobbho , where the primary stress is now on the newly added first syllable অ ô. Word-stress does not alter the meaning of a word and is always subsidiary to sentence-level stress.

Intonation

For Bengali words, intonation or pitch of voice have minor significance, apart from a few cases such as distinguishing between identical vowels in a diphthong. However, in sentences intonation does play a significant role. In a simple declarative sentence, most words and/or phrases in Bengali carry a rising tone, with the exception of the last word in the sentence, which only carries a low tone. This intonational pattern creates a musical tone to the typical Bengali sentence, with low and high tones alternating until the final drop in pitch to mark the end of the sentence.
In sentences involving focused words and/or phrases, the rising tones only last until the focused word; all following words carry a low tone. This intonation pattern extends to wh-questions, as wh-words are normally considered to be focused. In yes-no questions, the rising tones may be more exaggerated, and most importantly, the final syllable of the final word in the sentence takes a high falling tone instead of a flat low tone.

Vowel length

Like most Magadhan languages, vowel length is not contrastive in Bengali; all else equal, there is no meaningful distinction between a "short vowel" and a "long vowel", unlike the situation in most Indo-Aryan languages. However, when morpheme boundaries come into play, vowel length can sometimes distinguish otherwise homophonous words. This is because open monosyllables can have somewhat longer vowels than other syllable types. For example, the vowel in ca can be somewhat longer than the first vowel in caṭa, as ca is a word with only one syllable, and no final consonant. The suffix ṭa can be added to ca to form caṭa, and the long vowel is preserved, creating a minimal pair. Knowing this fact, some interesting cases of apparent vowel length distinction can be found. In general, Bengali vowels tend to stay away from extreme vowel articulation.
Furthermore, using a form of reduplication called "echo reduplication", the long vowel in ca can be copied into the reduplicant ṭa, giving caṭa. Thus, in addition to caṭa with a longer first vowel and caṭa with no long vowels, we have caṭa with two longer vowels.

Regional phonological variations

The phonological alternations of Bengali vary greatly due to the dialectal differences between the speech of Bengalis living on the পশ্চিম Poschim side and পূর্ব Purbo side of the Padma River.

Affricates and Fricatives

In the dialects prevalent in much of eastern and south-eastern Bangladesh, many of the stops and affricates heard in West Bengal are pronounced as fricatives. Western alveolo-palatal affricates চ , ছ , জ correspond to eastern চ , ছ, জ .
The aspirated velar stop খ and the aspirated labial stop ফ of Poshcim Bengali correspond to খ় and ফ় or in many dialects of Purbo Bengali. These pronunciations are more prevalent in the Sylheti dialect of northeastern Bangladesh—the dialect of Bengali most common in the United Kingdom.
Many Purbo Bengali dialects share phonological features with Assamese, including the debuccalization of শ to হ or খ়.

Tibeto-Burman influence

The influence of Tibeto-Burman languages on the phonology is mostly on the Bengali spoken in east of the Padma River and relatively less in West and South Bengal, as is seen by the lack of nasalized vowels in eastern Bengal, but nasalization is present in Indian Bengali and an alveolar articulation for the otherwise postalveolar stops ট, ঠ, ড, and ঢ, resembling the equivalent phonemes in languages such as Thai and Lao.
In the phonology of West and Southern Bengal, the distinction between র and ড়/ঢ় is clear and distinct like neighbouring Indian languages. However, in the far eastern variants, Tibeto-Burman influence makes the distinction less clear, and it sometimes becomes similar to the phonology of the Assamese ৰ rô . Unlike most languages of the region, Purbo Bengali dialects tend not to distinguish aspirated voiced stops ঘ, ঝ, ঢ, ধ, and ভ from their unaspirated equivalents, with some dialects treating them as allophones of each other and other dialects replacing the former with the latter completely.
Some variants of Bengali, particularly Chittagonian and Chakma Bengali, have contrastive tone and so differences in pitch can distinguish words. There is also a distinction between ই and ঈ in many northern Bangladeshi dialects. ই represents the uncommon, but ঈ the standard used for both letters in most other dialects.