Tumbuka Prosody: Between Tone And Stress
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Downing, Laura
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Tumbuka is spoken in the northern Lake Malawi region where it is typical for Bantu languages to have what has been called a restricted tone system: all words must have a High tone. This kind of prosodic system has stress-like properties, and functions similar to Kisseberth & Odden (2003). Vail (1972) suggests that Tumbuka is a purely stress language. This paper argues, in contrast, that because Tumbuka High tone realization has tone-like properties, as defined in Hyman (2006; 2009; 2012; 2014), as well as stress-like properties, it cannot be considered a canonical stress language. It is proposed that the synchronic Tumbuka prosodic system evolved from one where contrastive High tone takes a phrasal domain through processes
– formalizable as an OT factorial typology – which made phrasal prosody more transparently predictable by eliminating most tonal contrasts.