Hi,

A question: I go back to a memory (possibly incorrect) of hearing from a 
linguistics teacher at UW (long ago) that the retro-flex "ṣ" in Sanskrit was 
"barely phonemic." A  former student who had studied, through his Ph.D. exams, 
historical linguistics at UCLA focusing on Indo-European (maybe also 
Indo-Aryan) insisted that this sound was not phonemic. From time to time I'd 
encounter the issue in articles/books and found that the consensus seemed to 
favor this understanding. I used to challenge my student from time to time to 
test this, somehow, I suppose, wanting to vindicate my long ago teacher's 
position (or at least what I thought I recalled it to be). I've thought 
recently of two examples: the verbal root bhāṣ - “to speak.” and ṣaṣ (six). In 
neither case is there a "non-a vowel" preceding the sibilant, which would 
ordinarily condition retroflexion. In the case of "six,"  the ṣ is initial 
also.  How do we explain these instances in accord with the non-phonemic nature 
of ṣ?



Jim Ryan

Asian Philosophies and Cultures (Emeritus)
California Institute of Integral Studies
1453 Mission St.
San Francisco, CA 94103
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