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Focus and prominence in Chichewa, Chitumbuka and Durban Zulu
Author(s) -
Laura J. Downing
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
zas papers in linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1435-9588
DOI - 10.21248/zaspil.49.2008.363
Subject(s) - bantu languages , intonation (linguistics) , focus (optics) , zulu , stress (linguistics) , linguistics , prosody , pitch accent , sentence , philosophy , physics , optics
Much work on the interaction of prosody and focus assumes that, crosslinguistically, there is a necessary correlation between the position of main sentence stress (or accent) and focus, and that an intonational pitch change on the focused element is a primary correlate of focus. In this paper, I discuss primary data from three Bantu languages – Chichewa, Durban Zulu and Chitumbuka – and show that in all three languages phonological re-phrasing, not stress, is the main prosodic correlate of focus and that lengthening, not pitch movement, is the main prosodic correlate of phrasing. This result is of interest for the typology of intonation in illustrating languages where intonation has limited use and where, notably, intonation does not highlight focused information in the way we might expect from European stress languages.  

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