Tone and the prosodic stem in Malawian CiTonga

Author:

Mkochi Winfred1,Bickmore Lee23

Affiliation:

1. Department of African Languages and Linguistics , University of Malawi, Chancellor College , Zomba , Malawi

2. Department of Anthropology , University at Albany , Albany , NY , USA

3. Department of Linguistics and Language Practice , University of the Free State , Bloemfontein , South Africa

Abstract

AbstractIn CiTonga, a Bantu language spoken in northern Malawi, a number of different morphemes within the verbal complex can sponsor a High tone. While the High tone of a morpheme which precedes the stem is shown to be underlyingly pre-linked, those found after the beginning of the stem are argued to be underlyingly floating. This latter group of High tone autosegments can be shown to exclusively dock onto the first and last tone bearing units (TBUs) of the prosodic stem. This domain is not isomorphic with the morphological stem in that it must include the entire morphological stem as well as any of 3 different categories of enclitics which follow. The docking of the underlyingly floating Hs is shown to follow an edge-in process whereby a single H docks onto the initial TBU of the prosodic stem, a second H docks onto the final TBU of the prosodic stem, and any additional High tones remain floating, being phonologically inert. The paper provides an extensive range of newly presented data on this understudied Bantu language and constitutes a rare case of the prosodic stem being motivated by tonological factors.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference67 articles.

1. Bennett, Ryan. 2018. Recursive prosodic words in Kaqchikel (Mayan). Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics 3(1). 67. https://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.550.

2. Bickel, Balthasar, Kristine A. Hildebrandt & René Schiering. 2009. The distribution of phonological word domains: A probabilistic typology. In Janet Grijzenhout & Bariş Kabak (eds.), Phonological domains: Universals and deviations, 47–75. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.

3. Bickmore, Lee. forthcoming. Melodic tones. In Nancy C. Kula, Lutz Marten, Ellen Hurst & Jochem Zeller (eds.), The Oxford guide to the Bantu languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

4. Bickmore, Lee. 2007. Cilungu phonology. Stanford: Center for the Study of Language and Communication.

5. Bickmore, Lee & Winfred Mkochi. 2018. OCP effects in Malawian CiTonga tone patterns. Nordic Journal of African Studies 27(4). 1–23.

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1. Displacing the PStem;The Linguistic Review;2023-11-01

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