10 research outputs found

    OBSERVATIONS ON KUNAMA TONE * (Barka Dialect)

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    Kunama has been reported by different scholars as having two or three tones, downstep (or not), contrastive length of both consonants and vowels, and lexical stress. Despite this range of reported phenomena, little in-depth research into the prosodic system of Kunama has been undertaken. The aim of the present study is to report such a detailed investigation and to establish on a solid footing basic aspects of the tonal system of Kunama. The work reported is preliminary in the sense that its scope is limited: we present phonological and phonetic evidence for the existence of three level tones, which can combine to form a number of contour tones. This is followed by discussion of tonal phenomena in the noun phrase. No evidence for lexical stress is found

    African Linguistics in Central and Eastern Europe, and in the Nordic Countries

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    Language endangerment and language documentation in Africa

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    African Linguistics in Asia and Australia

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    Asian and Australian institutions with a research focus on African languages are of fairly recent vintage. Japan has a strong academic infrastructure devoted to African linguistics, based in several universities and research centres. China looks back more than 50 years of interest in teaching Swahili and other major African languages, recently broadening the scope to encompass other issues of linguistic interest. In South Korea, teaching Swahili was also the precursor of more general African linguistics, allowing for regional specializations of researchers. In Australia, academic interest emerges with the increasing presence of experts on African languages and linguistics in the country

    Linguistic features and typologies in languages commonly referred to as Nilo-Saharan

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    Afroasiatic linguistic features and typologies

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    African Linguistics in So-Called Lusophone and Hispanophone Africa and in Southern Africa

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    African Linguistics in the Americas, Asia and Australia.

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    This book provides an in-depth and comprehensive state-of-the-art study of African languages and language in Africa since its beginnings as a colonial science at the turn of the twentieth century in Europe

    Situated Language Use in Africa

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    Special-purpose registers of language in Africa

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