The Golok Dialect and Written Tibetan past-tense verb forms
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Tibetan orthography looks phonetically challenging, to say the least; and one may well wonder whether such tongue-twisting combinations as the brj of brjes, the blt- of bltas, or the bst- of bstan ever did twist a Tibetan tongue, or whether the significance of these and other such orthographic forms might not have been morphophonemic in origin, with the letters r, l, and s in the syllable initial of forms such as these serving to associate these past-tense forms lexically with their corresponding present-tense forms; e.g. Viewed in relation to Tibetan orthography the past-tense forms of a class of verbs in the Golok dialect seem to support this hypothesis. Table 1, below, contains a number of examples of Golok verbs in their past-tense and present-tense forms to illustrate a type of phonological analysis suited to that view of the r syllable-initial unit in the Golok examples, and, indirectly, in the WT examples too (the symbols b and b will be accounted for in section (B) below).
[1] R. K. Sprigg. A Polysystemic Approach, in Proto-Tibetan reconstruction, to tone and syllable-initial consonant clusters , 1972, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies.
[2] James A. Matisoff. The Loloish Tonal Split Revisited , 1972 .
[3] R. K. Sprigg. The role of 'R' in the development of the modern spoken Tibetan dialects , 1968 .