Low tone raising in Hausa: A critical assessment
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Date
1989
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Studies in African Linguistics
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Abstract
Low tone raising (LTR) refers to a phonological rule postulated for Hausa by
Leben [1971], whereby word-final Low-Low sequences change to Low-High
if the final vowel is long. In the first part of the paper, we show that
counterexamples to the rule are considerably more numerous and more varied
than previously thought. In the second part, we demonstrate that the
morphotonemic alternations that served to justify LTR can all be explained by
other, better means. We conclude that LTR does not constitute an active,
synchronically functioning tone rule in Hausa.
Description
Keywords
Hausa, Linguistics, African Languages, Tone
Citation
Newman, Paul and Philip J. Jaggar. 1989. Low tone raising in Hausa: A critical assessment. Studies in African Linguistics 20(3): 227-51.
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Article