Tone and prosodic recursion in Degema nouns and noun phrases

Nicholas Rolle, Ethelbert Emmanuel Kari

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

This paper presents the first systematic study of tone in nouns and noun phrases inDegema. Froma database of approximately 1,000 nouns,we find that nouns fall into three main tone patterns: /L-L/ (48% of nouns), /H-H/ (18%), and /L-HH/ (13%). This last case is theoretically important in that it includes cases where two separate H tones associate to the same tone-bearing unit, in violation of the Obligatory Contour Principle. In isolation, nouns are subject to two basic tone rules which alter their underlying forms: downstep is inserted between two final H's (e.g. /H-H//[HH]), and H is inserted at the end of an all-low sequence (e.g. /L-L//[LH]). The combined effect of these rules is that virtually all nouns and noun phrases have a pitch change. Further, we catalog tonal effects found on nouns in 33 distinctmodificational contexts within the noun phrase.We attribute these tonal effects to whethermodifiers plus the noun formphonological phrases (φ) or phonologicalwords (ω), andwhether they form recursive prosodic structures, e.g. of the type ( ( A )φ B )φ. By positing recursive structure, we can localize tonal effects to an outermost prosodic layer (e.g. φ[+max]), innermost layer (e.g. φ[+min]), non-inner or outermost layers (e.g. φ[-max]), or to the prosodic category as a whole (i.e. all layers of a φ).

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)249-283
Number of pages35
JournalJournal of African Languages and Linguistics
Volume43
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2022
Externally publishedYes

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Language and Linguistics
  • Linguistics and Language

Keywords

  • lexical contrast
  • Niger Delta
  • prosodic domains
  • recursion
  • tone

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