Erratic velars in West-Coastal Bantu : explaining irregular sound change in Central Africa
- Author
- Sara Pacchiarotti (UGent) and Koen Bostoen (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
-
- BANTUFIRST (The First Bantu Speakers South of the Rainforest: A Cross-Disciplinary Approach to Human Migration, Language Spread, Climate Change and Early Farming in Late Holocene Central Africa)
- Directionality in morphosyntactic change: West-Coastal Bantu as a historical test case for linguistic theory
- Abstract
- In this article, we present the first quantitative study of what we call multiple unconditioned reflexes (MUR) in Bantu, more specifically of Proto-Bantu velar stops *k and *g in theWest-Coastal Bantu (WCB) branch of the Bantu language family. MUR, also known as “doubles reflexes” in Bantu studies, represent a situation where one and the same proto-sound has two or more reflexes in a given language which cannot be accounted for by phonological conditioning and/or lexical borrowing. This diachronic irregularity has been explained in Bantu historical linguistics, and Niger-Congo studies more broadly, by reconstructing either an additional series of consonants (phonemic merger) or a latent conditioning that went lost (phonemic split). We show that MUR should not be explained, but rather taken as an indicator of the same pervasive irregularity of sound change reported in other parts of the world that are highly multilingual and lack a neat overlap between distinct languages and communities. Along with widespread multilingualism, we assess lexical diffusion, substrate influence, and spread-overspread events in Bantu language history as complementary explanations for the rise of MUR in WCB.
- Keywords
- multiple unconditioned reflexes, irregular sound change, West- Coastal Bantu, substrate interference, small-scale multilingualism, spreadover- spread events, lexical diffusion
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8758305
- MLA
- Pacchiarotti, Sara, and Koen Bostoen. “Erratic Velars in West-Coastal Bantu : Explaining Irregular Sound Change in Central Africa.” JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS, vol. 12, no. 3, 2022, pp. 381–445, doi:10.1075/jhl.20054.bos.
- APA
- Pacchiarotti, S., & Bostoen, K. (2022). Erratic velars in West-Coastal Bantu : explaining irregular sound change in Central Africa. JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS, 12(3), 381–445. https://doi.org/10.1075/jhl.20054.bos
- Chicago author-date
- Pacchiarotti, Sara, and Koen Bostoen. 2022. “Erratic Velars in West-Coastal Bantu : Explaining Irregular Sound Change in Central Africa.” JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS 12 (3): 381–445. https://doi.org/10.1075/jhl.20054.bos.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Pacchiarotti, Sara, and Koen Bostoen. 2022. “Erratic Velars in West-Coastal Bantu : Explaining Irregular Sound Change in Central Africa.” JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS 12 (3): 381–445. doi:10.1075/jhl.20054.bos.
- Vancouver
- 1.Pacchiarotti S, Bostoen K. Erratic velars in West-Coastal Bantu : explaining irregular sound change in Central Africa. JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS. 2022;12(3):381–445.
- IEEE
- [1]S. Pacchiarotti and K. Bostoen, “Erratic velars in West-Coastal Bantu : explaining irregular sound change in Central Africa,” JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS, vol. 12, no. 3, pp. 381–445, 2022.
@article{8758305,
abstract = {{In this article, we present the first quantitative study of what we call multiple unconditioned reflexes (MUR) in Bantu, more specifically of Proto-Bantu velar stops *k and *g in theWest-Coastal Bantu (WCB) branch of the Bantu language family. MUR, also known as “doubles reflexes” in Bantu studies, represent a situation where one and the same proto-sound has two or more reflexes in a given language which cannot be accounted for by phonological conditioning and/or lexical borrowing. This diachronic irregularity has been explained in Bantu historical linguistics, and Niger-Congo studies more broadly, by reconstructing either an additional series of consonants (phonemic merger) or a latent conditioning that went lost (phonemic split). We show that MUR should not be explained, but rather taken as an indicator of the same pervasive irregularity of sound change reported in other parts of the world that are highly multilingual and lack a neat overlap between distinct languages and communities. Along with widespread multilingualism, we assess lexical diffusion, substrate influence, and spread-overspread events in Bantu language history as complementary explanations for the rise of MUR in WCB.}},
author = {{Pacchiarotti, Sara and Bostoen, Koen}},
issn = {{2210-2116}},
journal = {{JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS}},
keywords = {{multiple unconditioned reflexes,irregular sound change,West- Coastal Bantu,substrate interference,small-scale multilingualism,spreadover- spread events,lexical diffusion}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{3}},
pages = {{381--445}},
title = {{Erratic velars in West-Coastal Bantu : explaining irregular sound change in Central Africa}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.1075/jhl.20054.bos}},
volume = {{12}},
year = {{2022}},
}
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