This paper examines the tonal behavior of six types of enclitics in Standard Yoruba, and shows that in all six cases, a constraint applies preventing the last syllable of the host and the adjacent clitic syllable from having the same (High or Low) tone. There are no other host + clitic cases in Yoruba for which such a constraint would be relevant. Potential violations of the constraint are avoided by one of five different methods, depending on the case: failure to link a floating tone, deletion of a tone belonging to the clitic, deletion of a tone belonging to the host, insertion of a toneless vowel, or failure to delete an otherwise optional toneless vowel. This pattern is thus a morphophonemic “conspiracy” in the classical sense. However, Yoruba does not have a more general constraint against same-tone sequences in underlying or derived environments.
2023. Two types of [NT]s in Panãra: Evidence for temporally ordered subsegmental units. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 8:1
Yakpo, Kofi
2021. Creole Prosodic Systems Are Areal, Not Simple. Frontiers in Psychology 12
Akinbo, Samuel
2019. Representation of Yorùbá Tones by a Talking Drum. An Acoustic Analysis. Linguistique et langues africaines :5 ► pp. 11 ff.
Ito, Junko & Armin Mester
2018. Tonal alignment and preaccentuation. Journal of Japanese Linguistics 34:2 ► pp. 195 ff.
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