Nominal Morphology

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Nominal Morphology

Nouns can be divided into patterns (classes/genders?).

Gloss Noun (sg.) Sg. article Noun (pl.) Pl. article generalizations for membership
Woman o-tɛʋ oχɛ 0-rɛʋ ʋɛ humans only
Gorilla a-kooŋg alɛ a-kooŋg akɛ
Elephant 0-faɲiik a-paɲiik akɛ
Elephant 0-paɲiik
Lake a-mbɛɛl alɛ 0-pɛɛl
Bull 0-ɴɢooχ 0-qooχ
Turtle 0-xomb a-qomb akɛ
Butterfly o-fiiɗ olɛ xa-piiɗ axɛ
Cat 0-muus 0-muus
Leg o-ɟaf olɛ a-caf akɛ
Woman (AUG) ga-ndɛʋ alɛ ga-ndɛʋ akɛ entirely and only augmentative-marked
Woman (DIM) o-ndɛʋ oŋgɛ fo-ndɛʋ akɛ/nɛ entirely and only diminutive-marked

Negation of a noun is indicated by the free morphology word [ɟɛgɛ]. It's unclear if this element can function verbally or if it can only negate nouns.

Diminutives

Gloss Singular Noun Diminutive of SN Plural Noun Diminutive of PN Notes
drum famb ombamb oŋga apamb distal "article" oŋga
field qool oɴɢool oŋga distal "article" oŋga
sugar suukar ɲɟuukar suukar did not elicit dim. of pl.

Augmentatives

Gloss Singular Noun Augmentative of SN Plural Noun Augmentative of PN Notes
cat muus gamuusala

Word/clitic status of "articles"

The "articles" discussed above are apparently not suffixal, as one might assume, making them either independent (and mobile) words or clitics (which attach to the right edge of a DP?).

For instance, note that the agreement for the article in haˈƥɛk ˈsuuˌkaraˌhɛ 'the pieces of sugar (sugarcubes)' matches that of haˈƥɛkaˌhɛ 'the pieces', rather than the agreement seen in ˈsuuˌkarfɛ 'the sugar': the article agrees with haˈƥɛk despite not being immediately adjacent to it.

It is also unclear at this point precisely what semantic function they serve. Some specifying and/or deictic function seems to be involved.

Stem-initial segment mutation

See also Inflectional Verbal Morphology for similar processes in verb stems.

Nouns of certain noun classes exhibit a stem-initial segment alternation between their singular and plural forms that runs on two parallel "tracks". Only initial consonants that can mutate actually do mutate; some never appear to mutate (e.g. /j/, /m/, /n/).

The non-implosive "track":

  • (sg) continuants --> (pl) voiceless oral stop, non-implosive. This change is reversed in operation in the human noun class: (sg) non-continuants --> (pl) continuants.
  • (sg) prenasalized stop --> (pl) voiceless oral stop, non-implosive
  • (sg) voiced stop --> (pl) voiceless oral stop, non-implosive

The implosive "track":

  • (sg) voiced implosive stop --> (pl) voiceless implosive stop

Diminutives/augmentatives (here "affectives") also exhibit initial segment mutations relative to the non-affective noun category. Further generalizations await.