• Login
    • Login
    Advanced Search
    View Item 
    •   Maseno IR Home
    • Journal Articles
    • School of Arts and Social Sciences
    • Department of Linguistics
    • View Item
    •   Maseno IR Home
    • Journal Articles
    • School of Arts and Social Sciences
    • Department of Linguistics
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Hiatal configurations and their resolution in kinshasa lingala: evidence from songs by TPOK jazz band

    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    HIATAL+CONFIGURATIONS+AND+THEIR+RESOLUTION+IN+LINGALA+EVIDENCE+FROM+SONGS+BY+TPOK+JAZZ+BAND+(2).pdf (350.4Kb)
    Publication Date
    2024-10-02
    Author
    Macharia, Joshua Maina
    Kembo-Sure, Edward
    Oloo, Pamela Anyango
    Omondi, Erick
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract/Overview
    This paper is a constraint-based description of hiatal configurations in Kinshasa Lingala and the strategies used to resolve them in connected speech. The study is grounded in Optimality Theory (Prince & Smolensky, 1993/2004) from which the notion of constraint ranking was used to analyse the phonological processes elicited to resolve hiatal configurations. The data were obtained from the lyrics of 15 songs composed and performed by the TPOK Jazz Band. The findings show that hiatal configurations occur in the underlying forms of words, phrases and clauses and since they are marked in connected speech, the dialect employs the processes of glide formation, vowel deletion, glide epenthesis and vowel coalescence to resolve them. Each of these processes results from the interaction between markedness and faithfulness constraints in which the anti-hiatus markedness constraint* HIATUS dominates all faithfulness constraints to ensure that the optimal outputs of the processes do not bear hiatal configurations. As such, the output in each process must satisfy a hierarchy of the relevant constraints by satisfying the greatest number of the high-ranking constraints. The paper concludes that hiatus resolution is chiefly motivated by the need to preserve the basic syllable structures of the dialect. The paper contributes to scholarship on the nexus between music and language.
    Permalink
    https://repository.maseno.ac.ke/handle/123456789/6220
    Collections
    • Department of Linguistics [77]

    Maseno University. All rights reserved | Copyright © 2022 
    Contact Us | Send Feedback

     

     

    Browse

    All of Maseno IRCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    Statistics

    View Usage Statistics

    Maseno University. All rights reserved | Copyright © 2022 
    Contact Us | Send Feedback