Aspects of the Morphology and Phonology of Konni (Sil International and the University of Texas at Arlington Publications in Linguistics, Vol. 141) - Michael C. Cahill - Books - SIL International - 9781556711848 - 2007
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Aspects of the Morphology and Phonology of Konni (Sil International and the University of Texas at Arlington Publications in Linguistics, Vol. 141)

Michael C. Cahill

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Aspects of the Morphology and Phonology of Konni (Sil International and the University of Texas at Arlington Publications in Linguistics, Vol. 141)

This study combines a descriptive and theoretical presentation of Konni, a Gur language of northern Ghana. It presents an Optimality Theory analysis of the entire phonological system.

The description of noun morphology includes the noun class system, the reduplicative agentive noun construction, noun-adjective complexes, and derived nouns. Verbal morphology is comprised of various aspectual suffixes. The phonological description is separate from the formal OT analysis in order to facilitate use by those with descriptive interests as well as theoretical.

The book includes major sections on consonants, vowels, and tone. It also includes a brief syntax sketch, co-occurrence restrictions, phoneme frequency counts, phonetic measurements of segment durations and vowel formants, as well as seven appendices of data. Some specific notes of interest:

  • Some phonology is limited to only certain noun classes.
  • A pervasive 9-vowel ATR vowel system is analyzed, to which dipthongization has an integral tie.
  • Some vowels assimilate only across consonants with the same place feature.
  • The existence of [H!H] on a single TBU is documented.
  • Tonal perturbations demand four different underlying representations for different nouns which all have a surface [LH].
  • True tonal polarity, distinct from dissimilation, is argued for.
  • Two cases of syntax-phonology interface occur in the vowel system.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Abbreviations

Introduction

1.1 The people and language
1.2 Sketch of syntax
1.3 Theoretical foundations and assumptions

Morphology

2.1 Nominal morphology
2.2 Verbal morphology
2.3 Modifiers
2.4 Concluding observation

Phonotactics and Syllables

.1 Relative frequency of phonemes
3.2 Co-occurrences
3.3 Distribution of consonants and vowels
3.4 Consonant clusters
3.5 Syllable structure
3.6 Minimality of nouns and verbs

Consonantal Phonology

4.1 Consonant inventory, contrasts, and measurements
4.2 Assimilatory process
4.3 Deletion
4.4 Dissimilation
4.5 Epenthesis
4.6 Conclusions

Vocalic Phonology

5.1 Vowel inventory, contrasts, and measurements
5.2 ATR vowel harmony
5.3 Diphthongization
5.4 Vowel assimilation I
5.5 Vowel epenthesis
5.6 The agentive prefix
5.7 Vowel shortening
5.8 Epenthesis or elision? Vowels after [g]
5.9 Vowel assimilation II: Total assimilation in vowel hiatus
5.10 Summary and discussion

Tone

6.1 Introduction to Konni tone
6.2 Basic tonal constraints
6.3 Nominals
6.4 Verbal tone
6.5 Tone on conditionals
6.6 Yes/no question intonation
6.7 A note on stress
6.8 Concluding remarks
Conclusion

7.1 Data highlights
7.2 Theoretical highlights
7.3 A complete tableau

Appendix
    Perturbation of target nouns in tone frames

Appendix B
    Nouns, plurals, and definite articles

Appendix C
    Compound nouns

Appendix D
    Noun-adjective complexes

Appendix E
    Associative noun phrases

Appendix F
    Verb aspects

Appendix G
    Preverbal particles

References
Subject Index
Index of Constraints

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released 2007
ISBN13 9781556711848
Publishers SIL International
Pages 518
Dimensions 150 × 27 × 225 mm   ·   712 g
Language English