
Reflexive-reciprocal syncretism in eastern Bantu languages of Tanzania : distribution and origins
- Author
- Aron Zahran (UGent) and Sebastian Dom (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- This paper presents an overview of the distribution of reflexive-reciprocal syncretism in Eastern Bantu languages spoken in Tanzania. Most Bantu languages encode reflexive and reciprocal constructions by means of two distinct verbal affixes. However, the Tanzanian Eastern Bantu languages under study have developed reflexive-reciprocal syncretism, in which the originally reflexive prefix has developed into a polyfunctional morpheme coding both reflexive and reciprocal constructions, to the detriment of the original reciprocal suffix. In a sample of 79 languages, reflexive-reciprocal syncretism is attested in 27 neighboring languages, thus constituting a clear areal feature. We propose that reflexive-reciprocal syncretism is not a language-internal innovation but was rather adopted from neighboring non-Bantu languages and subsequently spread out to its current distribution. We locate the heart of this contact-induced spread in the Tanzanian Rift Valley, a convergence zone in north-central Tanzania where languages from multiple African language families are spoken and have been in contact for an extensive period.
- Keywords
- Bantu, Tanzania, Linguistics, Rift Valley, Reflexives, Reciprocals, Language Contact, Syncretism, reflexive-reciprocal syncretism, contact-induced spread
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01JC62NSN2ZHFME11XAKR666JW
- MLA
- Zahran, Aron, and Sebastian Dom. “Reflexive-Reciprocal Syncretism in Eastern Bantu Languages of Tanzania : Distribution and Origins.” LANGUAGES, edited by Koen Bostoen and Sara Pacchiarotti, vol. 9, no. 11, 2024, doi:10.3390/languages9110347.
- APA
- Zahran, A., & Dom, S. (2024). Reflexive-reciprocal syncretism in eastern Bantu languages of Tanzania : distribution and origins. LANGUAGES, 9(11). https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9110347
- Chicago author-date
- Zahran, Aron, and Sebastian Dom. 2024. “Reflexive-Reciprocal Syncretism in Eastern Bantu Languages of Tanzania : Distribution and Origins.” Edited by Koen Bostoen and Sara Pacchiarotti. LANGUAGES 9 (11). https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9110347.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Zahran, Aron, and Sebastian Dom. 2024. “Reflexive-Reciprocal Syncretism in Eastern Bantu Languages of Tanzania : Distribution and Origins.” Ed by. Koen Bostoen and Sara Pacchiarotti. LANGUAGES 9 (11). doi:10.3390/languages9110347.
- Vancouver
- 1.Zahran A, Dom S. Reflexive-reciprocal syncretism in eastern Bantu languages of Tanzania : distribution and origins. Bostoen K, Pacchiarotti S, editors. LANGUAGES. 2024;9(11).
- IEEE
- [1]A. Zahran and S. Dom, “Reflexive-reciprocal syncretism in eastern Bantu languages of Tanzania : distribution and origins,” LANGUAGES, vol. 9, no. 11, 2024.
@article{01JC62NSN2ZHFME11XAKR666JW, abstract = {{This paper presents an overview of the distribution of reflexive-reciprocal syncretism in Eastern Bantu languages spoken in Tanzania. Most Bantu languages encode reflexive and reciprocal constructions by means of two distinct verbal affixes. However, the Tanzanian Eastern Bantu languages under study have developed reflexive-reciprocal syncretism, in which the originally reflexive prefix has developed into a polyfunctional morpheme coding both reflexive and reciprocal constructions, to the detriment of the original reciprocal suffix. In a sample of 79 languages, reflexive-reciprocal syncretism is attested in 27 neighboring languages, thus constituting a clear areal feature. We propose that reflexive-reciprocal syncretism is not a language-internal innovation but was rather adopted from neighboring non-Bantu languages and subsequently spread out to its current distribution. We locate the heart of this contact-induced spread in the Tanzanian Rift Valley, a convergence zone in north-central Tanzania where languages from multiple African language families are spoken and have been in contact for an extensive period.}}, articleno = {{347}}, author = {{Zahran, Aron and Dom, Sebastian}}, editor = {{Bostoen, Koen and Pacchiarotti, Sara}}, issn = {{2226-471X}}, journal = {{LANGUAGES}}, keywords = {{Bantu,Tanzania,Linguistics,Rift Valley,Reflexives,Reciprocals,Language Contact,Syncretism,reflexive-reciprocal syncretism,contact-induced spread}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{11}}, pages = {{25}}, title = {{Reflexive-reciprocal syncretism in eastern Bantu languages of Tanzania : distribution and origins}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.3390/languages9110347}}, volume = {{9}}, year = {{2024}}, }
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