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      Word Prosody in Lung’Ie: One System or Two?

      1 , 2
      Probus
      Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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          Abstract

          Creole languages have generally not figured prominently in cross-linguistic studies of word-prosodic typology. In this paper, we present a phonological analysis of the prosodic system of Lung’Ie or Principense (ISO 639-3 code: pre), a Portuguese-lexifier creole language spoken in São Tomé and Príncipe. Lung’Ie has produced a unique result of the contact between the two different prosodic systems common in creolization: a stress-accent lexifier and tone language substrates. The language has a restrictive privative H/Ø tone system, in which the /H/ is culminative, but non-obligatory. Since rising and falling tones are contrastive on long vowels, the tone must be marked underlyingly. While it is clear that tonal indications are needed, Lung’Ie reveals two properties more expected of an accentual system: (i) there can only be one heavy syllable per word; (ii) this syllable must bear a H tone. This raises the question of whether syllables with a culminative H also have metrical prominence, i.e. stress. However, the problem with equating stress with H tone is that Lung’Ie has two kinds of nouns: those with a culminative H and those which are toneless. The nouns with culminative H are 87% of Portuguese origin, incorporated through stress-to-tone alignment, while the toneless ones are 92% of African origin. Although other creole languages have been reported with split systems of “accented” vs. fully specified tonal lexemes, and others with mixed systems of tone and stress, Lung’Ie differs from these cases in treating African origin words as toneless, a quite surprising result. We consider different analyses and conclude that Lung’Ie has a privative /H/ tone system with the single unusual stress-like property of weight-to-tone.

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          Language Contact, Creolization, and Genetic Linguistics

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            Word-prosodic typology

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              How (not) to do phonological typology: the case of pitch-accent

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Probus
                Walter de Gruyter GmbH
                1613-4079
                0921-4771
                May 26 2021
                May 08 2021
                May 01 2021
                May 26 2021
                April 29 2021
                May 01 2021
                : 33
                : 1
                : 57-93
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina , Florianópolis , Brazil
                [2 ]University of California , Berkeley , USA
                Article
                10.1515/prbs-2021-0002
                2967f74c-10b2-45ce-bb7b-59c86fe6483b
                © 2021
                History

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