A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western Mande

Word‑level replacive tonal patterns are characteristic of the tonology of many Western Mande languages. Such patterns are explicitly discussed in extant descriptions of some languages but mentioned only in passing or not at all for others. This survey of replacive tonal patterns seeks to offer a bro...

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Main Author: Christopher R. Green
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mandenkan, Langage, Langues et Cultures d’Afrique Noire 2018-07-01
Series:Mandenkan
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/mandenkan/1420
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spelling doaj-4b4cce163fcf41818b122711f5730e0a2020-11-25T00:17:27Zeng Mandenkan, Langage, Langues et Cultures d’Afrique NoireMandenkan2104-371X2018-07-015910.4000/mandenkan.1420A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western MandeChristopher R. GreenWord‑level replacive tonal patterns are characteristic of the tonology of many Western Mande languages. Such patterns are explicitly discussed in extant descriptions of some languages but mentioned only in passing or not at all for others. This survey of replacive tonal patterns seeks to offer a broad, more comprehensive picture of this phenomenon in Western Mande by discussing not only major replacive tone patterns, but also highlighting and discussing micro‑variations in these patterns across this group. In doing so, I illustrate that patterns of replacive tone generally correlate with and support the recently proposed re‑alignment of classificatory genetic sub‑groupings of these languages in Vydrin (2009a, 2016). Because Vydrin’s classification is based primarily on comparative lexicostatistics, and not on tonology, this is an interesting finding.This survey is also significant in that it reports on word‑level replacive tonal patterns in languages from each of nine well‑accepted mid‑level genetic taxa in Western Mande, which far surpasses earlier surveys that aimed to catalog and analyze this phenomenon, namely Dwyer (1973) and deZeeuw (1979).http://journals.openedition.org/mandenkan/1420Mande languagesreplacive tonetone overlayclassificationtonologyMande
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher R. Green
spellingShingle Christopher R. Green
A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western Mande
Mandenkan
Mande languages
replacive tone
tone overlay
classification
tonology
Mande
author_facet Christopher R. Green
author_sort Christopher R. Green
title A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western Mande
title_short A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western Mande
title_full A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western Mande
title_fullStr A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western Mande
title_full_unstemmed A survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in Western Mande
title_sort survey of word‑level replacive tonal patterns in western mande
publisher Mandenkan, Langage, Langues et Cultures d’Afrique Noire
series Mandenkan
issn 2104-371X
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Word‑level replacive tonal patterns are characteristic of the tonology of many Western Mande languages. Such patterns are explicitly discussed in extant descriptions of some languages but mentioned only in passing or not at all for others. This survey of replacive tonal patterns seeks to offer a broad, more comprehensive picture of this phenomenon in Western Mande by discussing not only major replacive tone patterns, but also highlighting and discussing micro‑variations in these patterns across this group. In doing so, I illustrate that patterns of replacive tone generally correlate with and support the recently proposed re‑alignment of classificatory genetic sub‑groupings of these languages in Vydrin (2009a, 2016). Because Vydrin’s classification is based primarily on comparative lexicostatistics, and not on tonology, this is an interesting finding.This survey is also significant in that it reports on word‑level replacive tonal patterns in languages from each of nine well‑accepted mid‑level genetic taxa in Western Mande, which far surpasses earlier surveys that aimed to catalog and analyze this phenomenon, namely Dwyer (1973) and deZeeuw (1979).
topic Mande languages
replacive tone
tone overlay
classification
tonology
Mande
url http://journals.openedition.org/mandenkan/1420
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