Difference between revisions of "Tone"

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'''Table 1.1''' ''Tones of Ígálâ''
'''Table 1.1''' ''Tones of Ígálâ''
{| class="wikitable"
! Tone !! Example !! Meaning !! Comment
|-
| Extra high (EH) || (w)ɔ̋làdʒa̋ || Greeting for someone returning from market || Grammatical: “on subject clitics to mark sentential negation” (Èjèbá 49)
|-
| High (H) || ɔ́dʒɔ́ || day || Lexical
|-
| Downstepped high (HS) || ɔ́gbá ꜜúgúnú || in front of vulture || Grammatical, at high tone juncture of word boundaries.
|-
| Mid (M) || ɔ̀tákídā || book || Lexical
|-
| Low (L) || ɔ̀bàlà || cat || Lexical
|-
| Rising (LH) || ǒkâ || one || Lexical, contour
|-
| Falling (HL) || ígálâ || Ígálâ || Lexical, contour
|-
|
|}

Revision as of 11:22, 27 January 2022

Tonal phenomena in Ígálâ

Tones in Ígálâ

Seven types of tones, among which five are lexical, are recognized in the language as illustrated in Table 1.1 (Èjèbá 49). Note that a “downstepped high” refers to the lowering of a syllable that is usually high-toned.

Table 1.1 Tones of Ígálâ

Tone Example Meaning Comment
Extra high (EH) (w)ɔ̋làdʒa̋ Greeting for someone returning from market Grammatical: “on subject clitics to mark sentential negation” (Èjèbá 49)
High (H) ɔ́dʒɔ́ day Lexical
Downstepped high (HS) ɔ́gbá ꜜúgúnú in front of vulture Grammatical, at high tone juncture of word boundaries.
Mid (M) ɔ̀tákídā book Lexical
Low (L) ɔ̀bàlà cat Lexical
Rising (LH) ǒkâ one Lexical, contour
Falling (HL) ígálâ Ígálâ Lexical, contour