Word domains and downstep in Bamileke-Dschang
- 1 May 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Phonology Yearbook
- Vol. 2 (1) , 47-83
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0952675700000385
Abstract
The theoretical significance of the Bamileke-Dschang tone system has been evident since Tadadjeu (1974) first pointed out the unusual tonal oppositions found in this language. Whereas the majority of languages with tonal downstep permit this entity (!) only between high (or, perhaps more generally, only between non-low) tones, Dschang contrasts H and !H after both high (H) and low (L) tones and also contrasts L and ! L tones as well. The detailed account provided in Hyman & Tadadjeu (1976) has led to further comments, reactions and reanalyses, including Clark (1979), Hyman (1979), Watters Anderson (1980), Stewart (1981), Hyman (1982), Pulleyblank (1982, 1983), and an exchange of letters between M. Halle, S. C. Anderson and myself in 1981–1982.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inalterability in CV PhonologyLanguage, 1986
- Key Lowering (Downstep/Downglide) in DschangJournal of African Languages and Linguistics, 1981
- The Description of Terraced-Level Tone LanguagesLanguage, 1979
- A Reanalysis of Tonal DownstepJournal of African Languages and Linguistics, 1979
- Tone Features11The assistance (but not necessarily complicity) of the following people during the writing of this chapter is gratefully acknowledged: Baruch Elimelech, Vicki Fromkin, Louis Goldstein, Jean-Marie Hombert, Peter Ladefoged, Will Leben, Ian Maddieson, and Bill Welmers. All of these people know much more about tone features than I do, but they were all too busy to write this chapter.Published by Elsevier ,1978