Tonal Diversity in Languages of Papua New Guinea
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Statement of Responsibility:
Cahill, Michael
Series Issue:
97
Issue Date:
2011
Publisher:
Extent:
23 pages
Abstract:
Tone is well known in Asian and African languages, but less so in languages of Papua New
Guinea (PNG). The major survey of New Guinean tone systems is Donohue (1997). The present
paper introduces published and original data that support several types of tone systems of PNG,
distinct from pitch-accent systems. Tone languages of PNG operate on either the word level or
syllable level. Word-level tone languages operate in one of two ways. The first is by a limited set
of melodies that spread through syllables of the word via standard autosegmental operations. The
second type of word tone is that one syllable of a word displays contrastive tone (e.g. H vs. HL),
and the remaining syllables’ tone is filled in by default procedures. Other languages of PNG
display syllable-based tone, contrastive on each syllable of the word, independently of other
syllables. Of particular note are a set of adjectives in the Awa language which obliterate the
lexical tone of following words. This work, though produced independently of Donohue’s,
largely agrees with his typology.
Publication Status:
Published
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Part of Series:
SIL Electronic Working Papers 2011-008
Entry Number:
42109