This article examines two aspects of iKalanga phonology: hiatus resolution and /mu/ prefix reduction. Within Prosodic Words, hiatus is repaired through one of four ways: glide formation, secondary articulation, elision, and glide epenthesis. Coalescence occurs across Prosodic Word boundaries in grammaticalised and encliticised forms. /mu/ prefix reduction, which threatens to create complex onsets (NCs), is repaired through resyllabifying the remaining nasal as a separate syllable. It is not blocked by monosyllabic stems and the resultant syllabic nasal does not trigger postnasal hardening, is moraic and is homorganic to the immediately following consonant. These repair strategies, which are quite regular and typical of Bantu languages in ge...
A dissertation submitted to the University of the Witwatersrand in fulfilment of the requirements of...
Vowel hiatus is a dispreferred phenomenon in many languages. When vowel sequences arise through morp...
Vowel hiatus is a dispreferred phenomenon in many languages. When vowel sequences arise through morp...
Several languages reported in the literature have at most three hiatus resolution strategies, for ex...
Vowel hiatus is dispreferred in many languages of the world. Xitsonga, an understudied cross-border ...
This paper argues for context and vowel-feature sensitive repair of hiatal configuration in isiNdebe...
Vowel hiatus is inadmissible in many languages. ChiNambya and chiZezuru rely on coalescence, glide e...
Abstract: This article examines the morphophonological environments in which vowel sequences occur i...
This article focuses on how chiKaranga resolves vowel hiatus through coalescence. ChiKaranga has an ...
When the morphology of a language creates instances of successive vowels, these cases of vowel hiatu...
This article seeks to contribute to typology by presenting a formal comparative analysis of the effe...
This thesis investigates how Shona, an African language spoken in Zimbabwe deals with potentially on...
This article discusses the sequence /mu/ in Nyakyusa. The absence of its degree 2-vowel counterpart ...
It has been established that vowel sequences (vocalic hiatus configurations) are dispreferred in mos...
This article examines patterns of vowel hiatus resolution in ciNsenga, using Optimality Theory (OT)....
A dissertation submitted to the University of the Witwatersrand in fulfilment of the requirements of...
Vowel hiatus is a dispreferred phenomenon in many languages. When vowel sequences arise through morp...
Vowel hiatus is a dispreferred phenomenon in many languages. When vowel sequences arise through morp...
Several languages reported in the literature have at most three hiatus resolution strategies, for ex...
Vowel hiatus is dispreferred in many languages of the world. Xitsonga, an understudied cross-border ...
This paper argues for context and vowel-feature sensitive repair of hiatal configuration in isiNdebe...
Vowel hiatus is inadmissible in many languages. ChiNambya and chiZezuru rely on coalescence, glide e...
Abstract: This article examines the morphophonological environments in which vowel sequences occur i...
This article focuses on how chiKaranga resolves vowel hiatus through coalescence. ChiKaranga has an ...
When the morphology of a language creates instances of successive vowels, these cases of vowel hiatu...
This article seeks to contribute to typology by presenting a formal comparative analysis of the effe...
This thesis investigates how Shona, an African language spoken in Zimbabwe deals with potentially on...
This article discusses the sequence /mu/ in Nyakyusa. The absence of its degree 2-vowel counterpart ...
It has been established that vowel sequences (vocalic hiatus configurations) are dispreferred in mos...
This article examines patterns of vowel hiatus resolution in ciNsenga, using Optimality Theory (OT)....
A dissertation submitted to the University of the Witwatersrand in fulfilment of the requirements of...
Vowel hiatus is a dispreferred phenomenon in many languages. When vowel sequences arise through morp...
Vowel hiatus is a dispreferred phenomenon in many languages. When vowel sequences arise through morp...