Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in Xitsonga

This paper argues that the nativization of loanwords can result from pressure from morphology based on patterns of English loanword adaptations in Xitsonga, a southern Bantu language. The /s/ in /sC/ clusters of English is always realized in Xitsonga borrowings as [s] in non-initial positions, but t...

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Main Authors: Lee, Seunghun J., Hlungwani, Crous M.
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Stellenbosch University 2020-06-01
Series:Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/797
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spelling doaj-a9770fb17f1e43da9d5343d8a62ba6aa2020-11-25T02:33:32ZafrStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus1726-541X2224-33802020-06-01600719010.5842/60-0-797Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in XitsongaLee, Seunghun J.0Hlungwani, Crous M.1International Christian University, Tokyo, JapanUniversity of Venda, South AfricaThis paper argues that the nativization of loanwords can result from pressure from morphology based on patterns of English loanword adaptations in Xitsonga, a southern Bantu language. The /s/ in /sC/ clusters of English is always realized in Xitsonga borrowings as [s] in non-initial positions, but the /s/ is realized with variations when it appears in the initial position: faithfully with an alveolar fricative [s], or with a palatal fricative [ʃ]. A loanword adaptation experiment confirms that this position-sensitive variation is part of the grammatical knowledge of Xitsonga speakers. The adaptation of initial /sC/ clusters to [ʃiC] in the nativization process is argued to result from pressures to incorporate loanwords into the existing noun class system: a case where morphology triggers phonological changes. What is also important is the non-occurrence of palatalization in non-initial positions. Since non-initial consonants are not subject to the same morphological pressure, the nativatization process of /sC/ to [ʃiC] is blocked.https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/797loanword phonologynativization of loanwordsmorphological pressurephonology-morphology interfacexitsonga
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lee, Seunghun J.
Hlungwani, Crous M.
spellingShingle Lee, Seunghun J.
Hlungwani, Crous M.
Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in Xitsonga
Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
loanword phonology
nativization of loanwords
morphological pressure
phonology-morphology interface
xitsonga
author_facet Lee, Seunghun J.
Hlungwani, Crous M.
author_sort Lee, Seunghun J.
title Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in Xitsonga
title_short Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in Xitsonga
title_full Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in Xitsonga
title_fullStr Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in Xitsonga
title_full_unstemmed Effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: The borrowing of /s/ in Xitsonga
title_sort effects of morphology in the nativisation of loanwords: the borrowing of /s/ in xitsonga
publisher Stellenbosch University
series Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
issn 1726-541X
2224-3380
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This paper argues that the nativization of loanwords can result from pressure from morphology based on patterns of English loanword adaptations in Xitsonga, a southern Bantu language. The /s/ in /sC/ clusters of English is always realized in Xitsonga borrowings as [s] in non-initial positions, but the /s/ is realized with variations when it appears in the initial position: faithfully with an alveolar fricative [s], or with a palatal fricative [ʃ]. A loanword adaptation experiment confirms that this position-sensitive variation is part of the grammatical knowledge of Xitsonga speakers. The adaptation of initial /sC/ clusters to [ʃiC] in the nativization process is argued to result from pressures to incorporate loanwords into the existing noun class system: a case where morphology triggers phonological changes. What is also important is the non-occurrence of palatalization in non-initial positions. Since non-initial consonants are not subject to the same morphological pressure, the nativatization process of /sC/ to [ʃiC] is blocked.
topic loanword phonology
nativization of loanwords
morphological pressure
phonology-morphology interface
xitsonga
url https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/797
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