
Affrication of Voiced Labials (/B, V/) in Changana
Author(s) -
Armindo Ngunga,
Célia Adriano Cossa
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of law and social sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2226-6402
DOI - 10.53974/unza.jlss.3.1.447
Subject(s) - hiatus , vowel , linguistics , mathematics , mid vowel , phonology , tone (literature) , computer science , philosophy , formant
This article describes and analyses the frication of the voiced labial
consonants (/b/ and /v/) in Changana, a Bantu language (S53, in Guthrie’s
1967-1971 classification). In the light of the autosegmental phonology (Leben
1973, 1978, 2006; 1973, Goldsmith 1976, 2004; Odden 1986) combined with
the Feature Geometry theory, the article discusses phonological processes
that turn voiced labials into labial-alveolar affricate [bz]. In this study, we
assume that the process of hiatus resolution by gliding is the trigger of the
alteration under analysis. That is, when derivative suffixes with low vowel
(/a/) and the high front vowel (/i/) in the initial position are attached to
words with rounded vowels (/o, u/) in final position in some morphological
processes such as diminutivisation and locativisation, the results are
undesirable sequences (hiatus). In order to resolve such hiatus, a series
of phonological processes such as the turning of the rounded vowel in the
word final position into labial-velar glide allowing the adjacency of voiced
labials with labial glide which violates the Obligatory Contour Principle
(OCP) takes place. The present study analyses the OCP using empirical
Changana data collected both in the fieldwork supplemented by data from
other sources including bibliographical and introspective data. The article
is organised as follows. Firstly, it discusses the theoretical framework;
secondly it analyses the Hiatus Resolution in Changana; thirdly, it analyses
the data and lastly, it presents the main conclusions of the study.