Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in Akan

This paper discusses compound constructions in Akan, which are mostly nouns. Compounding is generally explained as a morphosyntactic word-formation process and the resulting compound word is commonly described as a “new” linguistic unit (Haspelmath, 2002; Marfo, 2009). The paper focuses on Noun-Noun...

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Main Author: Charles Marfo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Malaysia Sarawak 2016-06-01
Series:Issues in Language Studies
Online Access:http://publisher.unimas.my/ojs/index.php/ILS/article/view/1630
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spelling doaj-e9785302d9534e70a89fa5204b3fbaa92020-11-25T02:28:59ZengUniversiti Malaysia SarawakIssues in Language Studies2180-27262016-06-015110.33736/ils.1630.20161630Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in AkanCharles Marfo0Department of Modern Languages, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana This paper discusses compound constructions in Akan, which are mostly nouns. Compounding is generally explained as a morphosyntactic word-formation process and the resulting compound word is commonly described as a “new” linguistic unit (Haspelmath, 2002; Marfo, 2009). The paper focuses on Noun-Noun (N-N) and Noun-Adjective (N-Adj) compounds in Akan and particularly contends that, for N-N and N-Adj compounds to be realized in Akan, the compound members should map into one prosodic phrase. It is also suggested that the same mapping should be the case if there could be proper or consistent realization of some phonological changes that occur in the compound. In this direction, the paper explains that the syntactic structure of the compound (i.e., the noun phrase (NP)), does not solely ensure the domain of the Akan compound nor the domain properties that trigger the rules that apply in it, but phonological information as well; thus, prosodic constraints are observed. Furthermore, the structure of the Akan compound is illuminated in terms of Attribute-Value Matrix (e.g., Butt & King, 1998). The paper reiterates in conclusion that compounds in Akan and rules that apply in them are better accounted for through dictates of the prosodic structure.http://publisher.unimas.my/ojs/index.php/ILS/article/view/1630
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charles Marfo
spellingShingle Charles Marfo
Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in Akan
Issues in Language Studies
author_facet Charles Marfo
author_sort Charles Marfo
title Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in Akan
title_short Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in Akan
title_full Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in Akan
title_fullStr Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in Akan
title_full_unstemmed Prosody Drives Structure: The Case of Compounds in Akan
title_sort prosody drives structure: the case of compounds in akan
publisher Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
series Issues in Language Studies
issn 2180-2726
publishDate 2016-06-01
description This paper discusses compound constructions in Akan, which are mostly nouns. Compounding is generally explained as a morphosyntactic word-formation process and the resulting compound word is commonly described as a “new” linguistic unit (Haspelmath, 2002; Marfo, 2009). The paper focuses on Noun-Noun (N-N) and Noun-Adjective (N-Adj) compounds in Akan and particularly contends that, for N-N and N-Adj compounds to be realized in Akan, the compound members should map into one prosodic phrase. It is also suggested that the same mapping should be the case if there could be proper or consistent realization of some phonological changes that occur in the compound. In this direction, the paper explains that the syntactic structure of the compound (i.e., the noun phrase (NP)), does not solely ensure the domain of the Akan compound nor the domain properties that trigger the rules that apply in it, but phonological information as well; thus, prosodic constraints are observed. Furthermore, the structure of the Akan compound is illuminated in terms of Attribute-Value Matrix (e.g., Butt & King, 1998). The paper reiterates in conclusion that compounds in Akan and rules that apply in them are better accounted for through dictates of the prosodic structure.
url http://publisher.unimas.my/ojs/index.php/ILS/article/view/1630
work_keys_str_mv AT charlesmarfo prosodydrivesstructurethecaseofcompoundsinakan
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