Page Header

  • Home
  • About
  • Login
  • Register
  • Search
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • Statistics
Home > Vol 8, No 2 (2021) > Al Solami

Editorial Board

Reviewer

Focus and Scope

Guidelines

Online Submission

Peer Review

Publication Ethic

Plagiarism and Retraction

Copyright

Publication Fee

Open Access

Indexing & Abstract

History

 

 

The Prosody of Harar Oromo Nouns

Majed Al Solami

Abstract

This paper examines the tone in Harar Oromo, a language widely spoken in Ethiopia. The focus is on tone in nouns. The examination implements acoustic analysis of tone using pitch contours, which helps in determining the type and position of tone in roots and in nominative and accusative case. The results show that roots can have either L or H tone, while case suffixes always have H tone. This suggests that tone is predictable in suffixes, but not in roots. The analysis suggests that Harar Oromo has a restricted tone system that is similar to stress-like languages.

 Keywords

Tone; Harar Oromo; case; stress

 Full Text:

PDF

References

Al-Nassir, A. A. (1993). Sibawayh the phonologist. A critical study of the phonetic and phonological theory of Sibawayh as presented in his treatise al-Kitab, (Library of Arabic Linguistics, 10), London/New York: Kegan Paul International.

Boersma, P. & Weenink, D. (2019). Praat: doing phonetics by computer [Computer program]. Version 5.3.60, retrieved 8 May 2014 from http://www.praat.org/

de Lacy, Paul (2002). The formal expression of markedness.  PhD dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Ding, P. (2006). A typological study of tonal systems of Japanese and Prinmi: towards a definition of pitch-accent languages. Journal of Universal Language 7, 1-35.

Donohue, M. (1997). Tone in New Guinea languages. Linguistic Typology 1, 347-386.

Duanmu, S. (2008). A two-accent model of Japanese word prosody. Toronto Papers in Linguistics. Vol 28:29-48.

Evans, J. (2009). Types of tonal culminativity in languages of Sichuan and elsewhere. Ms., Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica, Available from  http://www.ling.sinica.edu.tw/v3-3-1_en.asp-auserid=12.htm

Geshe, D. & Devardhi, J. (2013). Assimilation in Oromo Phonology. Language in India: retrieved 8 May 2020 from www.languageinindia.com

Goldsmith, J. (1976). Autosegmental Phonology. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. MIT.

Gordon, M. (2014). Disentangling stress and pitch-accent: A typology of prominence at different prosodic levels, in van der Hulst, H.(Ed.) Word Stress. Theoretical and typological issues.

Gragg, G. (1976). Oromo of Wallega in Bender (ed). The Non-Semitic Language of Ethiopia. The African Study Center. Michigan State University.

Griefenow-Mewis, C. (2001). A Grammatical Sketch of Written Oromo. Rüdiger Köppe Verlag.

Hostetler, R., Hostetler, C. (1975). A tentative description of Tinputz phonology. Phonologies of Five Austronesian Languages. Work papers in Papua New Guinea Languages, vol. 13, pp. 5-44.

Hyman, L.M. (1977). Tone and/or accent. In D.J. Napoli (ed.), Elements of tone, stress and intonation, 1-20. Georgetown UP.

Hyman, L.M. (1981). Tonal accent in Somali. Studies in African Linguistics 12, 169-203.

Hyman, L.M. (2009). How (not) to do phonological typology: the case of pitch-accent. Language Sciences 31.213-238.

Hyman, L.M., Byarushengo, E.R. (1984). A model of Haya tonology. In: Clements, G.N., Goldsmith, J. (Eds.), Autosegmental Studies in Bantu Tone. Foris Publications, Dordrecht, pp. 53-103.

Jamaica, K., (2020). Syllable Structure of Oromo (Harar dialect) Based on Moraic Approach. Journal of Literature, Languages and Linguistics, 71(1), 1-15

Kebede, H. (2005). The Varieties of Oromo. In The Working Papers of the Ethiopian Language Research Center, Addis Ababa University, 1: 1, 134-150.

Lloret, M-R. (1997). Oromo Phonology. In Alan S. Kaye (Ed.), Phonology of Asia and Africa, Vol. 1 (pp. 493-519). Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns.

Lin, Y-J. (2010). By no means marginal: privative tone in Zhoukeji Rgyalrong. Language and Linguistics 13(4): 625-662.

Owens, J. (1985). A Grammar of Harar Oromo. Helmut Buske Verlag Hamburg.

Snider, K. (2014) On Establishing Underlying Tonal Contrast. Language Documentation & Conservation 8: 707-737.

Stroomer, H. (1987). A Comparative Study of Three Southern Oromo dialects in Kenya, Kuschitische Sprachstudien 6, Hamburg, Helmut Buske Verlag.

Stroomer, H. (1995). A grammar of Boraana Oromo (Kenya). Köln: R. Köppe..

Swick, J. (1966). Chuave phonological hierarchy. Pacific Linguistics Series A 7, 33-l48.

Voorhoeve, J. (1973). Safwa as restricted tone system. Studies in African Linguistics 4, 1-22

Youssouf, T. (2019). The Copula in the Oromo language (Oromic). International Journal of Innovative Research and Development, 8(12), 1-16.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.25077/ar.8.2.107-130.2021 Copyright (c) 2021 Majed Al Solami

Editorial

Welcome visitors, We are glad to announce you that Jurnal Arbitrer has just accreditated by Kemenristekdiki SINTA 2. We are now working on improving our management and quality so we can publish a high quality publication. We invite authors and reviewers from around the world to contribute in the discipline of linguistic.

ISSN

2550-1011 (Online)

2339-1162 (Print)

User
Notifications
  • View
  • Subscribe
Journal Content

Browse
  • By Issue
  • By Author
  • By Title
real
time web analytics
 
 
 
 
Current Issue Atom logo
RSS2 logo
RSS1 logo

Published by:

Masyarakat Linguistik Indonesia (MLI) Universitas Andalas.



EuroPub


Lisensi Creative Commons

Under Liscense of Creative Commons Attributioni-NonCommercial 4.0 International.