Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ

This thesis investigates two post-nominal morphemes, bi and nʊ, in Akan (a Kwa language spoken mainly in Ghana). I analyze bi as an indefinite marker and nʊ as a definite marker. Bi occurs in different environments; the main two environments are the pronominal environment and the determiner environm...

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Main Author: Arkoh, Ruby Becky
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35083
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-350832018-01-05T17:25:05Z Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ Arkoh, Ruby Becky This thesis investigates two post-nominal morphemes, bi and nʊ, in Akan (a Kwa language spoken mainly in Ghana). I analyze bi as an indefinite marker and nʊ as a definite marker. Bi occurs in different environments; the main two environments are the pronominal environment and the determiner environment where it follows the noun within a DP. These environments correlate with certain tonal variations. I argue that in the pronominal use, bi is a specific indefinite pronoun and is toneless. Its specificity status is achieved through a weak anaphoric relationship it shares with a previously-mentioned noun in the discourse or a deictic element. In its determiner use, bi is a specific indefinite which is interpreted via a choice function. It bears a high tone. The Akan morpheme nʊ is used for different functions. It is used as a third person singular pronoun, as a definite article, as a distal demonstrative marker and as a clausal marker. These uses correlate with some tonal alternations. I argue that when the morpheme is used as a pronoun, it is toneless; however when it is used as a determiner or a clause marker it is marked with a high tone. I also argue that the morpheme in all its different functions encodes one semantic value which is familiarity. I take familiarity to entail both hearer old and discourse old along the lines of Prince (1988). Arts, Faculty of Linguistics, Department of Graduate 2011-06-02T19:23:52Z 2011-06-02T19:23:52Z 2011 2011-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35083 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
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language English
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description This thesis investigates two post-nominal morphemes, bi and nʊ, in Akan (a Kwa language spoken mainly in Ghana). I analyze bi as an indefinite marker and nʊ as a definite marker. Bi occurs in different environments; the main two environments are the pronominal environment and the determiner environment where it follows the noun within a DP. These environments correlate with certain tonal variations. I argue that in the pronominal use, bi is a specific indefinite pronoun and is toneless. Its specificity status is achieved through a weak anaphoric relationship it shares with a previously-mentioned noun in the discourse or a deictic element. In its determiner use, bi is a specific indefinite which is interpreted via a choice function. It bears a high tone. The Akan morpheme nʊ is used for different functions. It is used as a third person singular pronoun, as a definite article, as a distal demonstrative marker and as a clausal marker. These uses correlate with some tonal alternations. I argue that when the morpheme is used as a pronoun, it is toneless; however when it is used as a determiner or a clause marker it is marked with a high tone. I also argue that the morpheme in all its different functions encodes one semantic value which is familiarity. I take familiarity to entail both hearer old and discourse old along the lines of Prince (1988). === Arts, Faculty of === Linguistics, Department of === Graduate
author Arkoh, Ruby Becky
spellingShingle Arkoh, Ruby Becky
Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ
author_facet Arkoh, Ruby Becky
author_sort Arkoh, Ruby Becky
title Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ
title_short Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ
title_full Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ
title_fullStr Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ
title_full_unstemmed Semantics of Akan bi and nʊ
title_sort semantics of akan bi and nʊ
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35083
work_keys_str_mv AT arkohrubybecky semanticsofakanbiandnʊ
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