This article describes and analyses the verbal tone system of Khayo, a previously undocumented dialect of Luyia (Bantu, Kenya and Uganda, J. 30). It provides a systematic account of the tonal marking of tense-aspect-mood-polarity and clause type distinctions on verbs as well as tonal alternations triggered by H-toned prefixes and by prosodic differences in the verb stem. The primary analytical challenge posed by the Khayo data is accounting for cross‑melody differences in the application of tonal rules ; there are many contexts in which rules motivated for one melody fail to apply in another melody, even though the phonological environment is met. The analysis here accounts for these differences as the result of morphologically specific ton...
This dissertation provides a prosodic analysis of Khoekhoe (Nama), a Khoesan language spoken by abou...
This article reports on a production study that investigates the realisation of a single high tone i...
Verbs in Orungu (Bantu B11b) are characterized by the use of melodic tones in verbal paradigms, with...
This article describes and analyses the verbal tone system of Khayo, a previously undocumented diale...
This dissertation is a study of the verbal tone patterns Lumarachi and Lunyala---two previously unde...
This paper offers an overview of verbal tone melodies within Luyia, a cluster of Bantu languages spo...
In this paper I describe the tonal melodies of Lulamogi, a small understudied language of the Lugand...
This paper describes the process of studying the notoriously complex verbal tone systems of Bantu la...
This dissertation seeks to explore the architecture of tonal structures in a formal phonological ana...
This paper describes in some detail the Melodic H tone patterns found in various Emakhuwa (P30) spee...
Basaa, a Narrow Bantu language (A43) spoken in Cameroon, displays a two‑tone lexical contrast, L and...
Kifuliiru has three lexical classes of verbs : High, Low, and Toneless ; and six basic grammatical t...
This paper explores new tonal data on the verb system of Mbadja, an Oshiwambo variety spoken in Ango...
A study examined the tonal patterns in Komo, a sub-Bantu language of about 200,000 speakers in Zaire...
A fundamental notion of many suprasegmental theories such as Autosegmental Phonology is that of a “t...
This dissertation provides a prosodic analysis of Khoekhoe (Nama), a Khoesan language spoken by abou...
This article reports on a production study that investigates the realisation of a single high tone i...
Verbs in Orungu (Bantu B11b) are characterized by the use of melodic tones in verbal paradigms, with...
This article describes and analyses the verbal tone system of Khayo, a previously undocumented diale...
This dissertation is a study of the verbal tone patterns Lumarachi and Lunyala---two previously unde...
This paper offers an overview of verbal tone melodies within Luyia, a cluster of Bantu languages spo...
In this paper I describe the tonal melodies of Lulamogi, a small understudied language of the Lugand...
This paper describes the process of studying the notoriously complex verbal tone systems of Bantu la...
This dissertation seeks to explore the architecture of tonal structures in a formal phonological ana...
This paper describes in some detail the Melodic H tone patterns found in various Emakhuwa (P30) spee...
Basaa, a Narrow Bantu language (A43) spoken in Cameroon, displays a two‑tone lexical contrast, L and...
Kifuliiru has three lexical classes of verbs : High, Low, and Toneless ; and six basic grammatical t...
This paper explores new tonal data on the verb system of Mbadja, an Oshiwambo variety spoken in Ango...
A study examined the tonal patterns in Komo, a sub-Bantu language of about 200,000 speakers in Zaire...
A fundamental notion of many suprasegmental theories such as Autosegmental Phonology is that of a “t...
This dissertation provides a prosodic analysis of Khoekhoe (Nama), a Khoesan language spoken by abou...
This article reports on a production study that investigates the realisation of a single high tone i...
Verbs in Orungu (Bantu B11b) are characterized by the use of melodic tones in verbal paradigms, with...