Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Vowel elision and reduction in Bambara. / Vydrin, Valentin .
In: Italian Journal of Linguistics, Vol. 32, No. 1, 2020, p. 103-124.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Vowel elision and reduction in Bambara
AU - Vydrin, Valentin
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - The goal of this study is to test instrumentally the hypothesis that Bambara disyllabic feet are distributed into three types. The results of the study can be summarised as follows: – reduction and elision of a short V1 in disyllabic feet is phonetic, rather than phonological, and can be explained by phonotactics. Therefore, disyllabic feet with a short first vowel form just one type; – V1 length, although phonologically relevant, displays some instability between speakers; – in a disyllabic foot (at least when its boundaries coincide with word boundaries), length characteristics are in complementary distribution: if the first vowel is short, the second is long, and if the first vowel is long, the second is short. This phenomenon can be defined as ‘foot isochrony’; – if the first vowel of a disyllabic foot is short, the duration of the second vowel depends on the position of the foot within the word: word-finally it is long, otherwise it is short; – the difference between disyllabic feet types in Bambara can be exhaustively described by means of the length of the first vowel; there seems to be no need to postulate the existence of stress.
AB - The goal of this study is to test instrumentally the hypothesis that Bambara disyllabic feet are distributed into three types. The results of the study can be summarised as follows: – reduction and elision of a short V1 in disyllabic feet is phonetic, rather than phonological, and can be explained by phonotactics. Therefore, disyllabic feet with a short first vowel form just one type; – V1 length, although phonologically relevant, displays some instability between speakers; – in a disyllabic foot (at least when its boundaries coincide with word boundaries), length characteristics are in complementary distribution: if the first vowel is short, the second is long, and if the first vowel is long, the second is short. This phenomenon can be defined as ‘foot isochrony’; – if the first vowel of a disyllabic foot is short, the duration of the second vowel depends on the position of the foot within the word: word-finally it is long, otherwise it is short; – the difference between disyllabic feet types in Bambara can be exhaustively described by means of the length of the first vowel; there seems to be no need to postulate the existence of stress.
KW - vowel elision
KW - featural foot
KW - syllable weight
KW - Bambara
UR - http://www.italian-journal-linguistics.com/wp-content/uploads/6_Vydrin.pdf
UR - https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02983191
M3 - Article
VL - 32
SP - 103
EP - 124
JO - Italian Journal of Linguistics
JF - Italian Journal of Linguistics
SN - 1120-2726
IS - 1
ER -
ID: 70662499