Difference between revisions of "Sereer Grammar"

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==Phonological alternations==
 
==Phonological alternations==
 
Sometimes Bari phonemes unexpectedly change into other phonemes or allophones. Fortunately, these alternations all follow well-behaved phonological rules.
 
 
Trilled and tapped [r] appear to alternate in careful vs. fast speech. [[User:Jevon|Jevon]] 01:52, 3 September 2012 (UTC)
 
   
 
=Morphology=
 
=Morphology=

Revision as of 17:55, 13 September 2012

Serer a language of the Senegambian branch of Niger–Congo spoken by 1.2 million people in Senegal and 30,000 in The Gambia.[1] It is the principal language of the Serer people.

Getting started

The handout provided by MediaWiki is below:

In addition to the handbook, a great way to learn how to format Wiki is by poking around Wikipedia, looking for interesting ideas, and clicking the edit button next to them. This is how I figured out how to create sortable lists, for example.

Another question is how we will generate interlinear glosses. The table environment is probably our best bet. This is how most LaTeX glossing packages work.

Ancillary pages

Upload recordings and annotations here.

This is where wordlists for individual elicitation sessions can be uploaded and checked to avoid redundant work.

  • Older pages

- Bari grammar (old main page) - Recordings and transcriptions (Bari) - Bari lexicon

Phonology

Bari words are made up of sounds called phonemes. There are many phonemes in Bari.

Phonological inventory

A tentative consonant inventory of Serer:

Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal Pharyngeal
Nasal    
Stop voiceless    
voiced      
implosive          
Fricative        
Liquid            
Glide            

A tentative vowel inventory of Bari:

Front Central Back
High
High-mid  
Mid
Open  

Phonotactics

Serer syllable structure is also very interesting.

Phonological alternations

Morphology

Bari words consist of free morphemes and bound morphemes. Both are abundant and suitable for further research.

Nominal Morphology

Nouns, demonstratives, possessives, all involve morphemes in Bari, which is a major finding.

Verbal Morphology

Like nouns, verbs are made up of morphemes. This is unsurprising given that verbs, like nouns, are words.

Syntax

Words can be organized into sequences which produce predictable meanings in Bari. The sequences and meanings which can be produces in this manner are extremely complex, unfortunately, and it will take some effort to sort out all the tricky bits.