Phonological phrasing and questions in Chimwiini

Authors

  • Charles W. Kisseberth

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.55.2011.410

Abstract

This paper examines how questions, both Wh-questions and yes-no questions, are phrased in Chimwiini, a Bantu language spoken in southern Somalia. Questions do not require any special phrasing principles, but Wh-questions do provide much evidence in support of the principle Align-Foc R, which requires that focused or emphasized words/constituents be located at the end of a phonological phrase. Question words and enclitics are always focused and thus appear at the end of a phrase. Although questions do not require any new phrasing principles, they do display complex accentual (tonal) behavior. This paper attempts to provide an account of these accentual phenomena.

 

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Published

2011

How to Cite

Kisseberth, Charles W. 2011. “Phonological Phrasing and Questions in Chimwiini”. ZAS Papers in Linguistics 55 (January):83-116. https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.55.2011.410.