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Luganda The Ganda language or Luganda (, , ) is a Bantu language spoken in the African Great Lakes region. It is one of the major languages in Uganda and is spoken by more than 10 million Baganda and other people principally in central Uganda including ...
, the language spoken by the
Baganda The Ganda people, or Baganda (endonym: ''Baganda''; singular ''Muganda''), are a Bantu ethnic group native to Buganda, a subnational kingdom within Uganda. Traditionally composed of 52 clans (although since a 1993 survey, only 46 are official ...
people from Central Uganda, is a
tonal language Tone is the use of pitch in language to distinguish lexical or grammatical meaning – that is, to distinguish or to inflect words. All verbal languages use pitch to express emotional and other paralinguistic information and to convey empha ...
of the
Bantu Bantu may refer to: *Bantu languages, constitute the largest sub-branch of the Niger–Congo languages *Bantu peoples, over 400 peoples of Africa speaking a Bantu language * Bantu knots, a type of African hairstyle *Black Association for National ...
family. It is traditionally described as having three tones: high ('), low (') and falling ('). Rising tones are not found in Luganda, even on long vowels, since a sequence such as automatically becomes ''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xiii. Tones perform various functions in Luganda: they help to distinguish one word from another, they distinguish one verb tense from another, and they are also used in sentence intonation, for example, to distinguish a statement from a question. The complexity of the Luganda tonal system has attracted the attention of numerous scholars, who have sought ways of describing Luganda tones most economically according to different linguistic models.


Overview

In Luganda some words have a lexical tone: 'city', 'teacher'. The tone can be a falling one: 'country', 'child', 'hospital'. Some words have a double tone or a tone spread across three syllables in a plateau: 'driver', 'prison'. In some nouns the tone moves position: 'girl', but 'she is a girl'. Other words, such as 'book', 'person', 'milk', or (name of a town), are underlyingly toneless. However, toneless words usually receive automatic default tones, called a phrasal tones, on all syllables except the first: , . But in some circumstances this phrasal tone does not appear, for example, when the word is the subject of a sentence or qualified by a number. The automatic phrasal tones are not as high-pitched as lexical tones. Automatic phrasal tones are also added at the end of lexically-toned words. In nouns the phrasal tones begin on the syllable immediately after the fall in pitch, e.g. 'hospital', 'south'. Again, these phrasal tones do not appear when the word is used as the subject of the sentence or qualified by a number. However, in some verbal forms the phrasal tones do not begin immediately after the accent but after an interval of two or three low-toned syllables, e.g. 'they will see'. This complexity prevents Luganda from being described as a simple pitch-accent language. Verbs are divided into two tonal classes, those with a tone, such as 'to see', and those that are toneless apart from the automatic phrasal tone, such as 'to read'. Verbs are subject to a series of complex tonal patterns, which vary according to tense and whether the verbs are high-toned or toneless, positive or negative, or used in a main clause or relative clause.


Common intonational patterns

Although there are many complexities of detail, there are certain types of intonational pattern which occur regularly. One common pattern is for sentences to have a gradual descent from the first high tone to the last, as in the following:''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 105. * 'it is the chief city in Uganda' The three high tones ''ú'', ''ú'', and ''áń'' stand out prominently from the other syllables, and each one is a little lower than the last, as if coming down in a series of steps. The toneless syllables between are lower in pitch than the high tones. This descent, which is known as
downdrift In phonetics, downdrift (also known as ''automatic downstep'') is the cumulative lowering of pitch in the course of a sentence due to interactions among tones in a tonal language. Downdrift often occurs when the tones in successive syllables are H ...
, 'automatic downstep', or 'catathesis', is common in many African languages whenever tones come in a sequence HLH (high-low-high). Another type of tonal pattern very common in Luganda is the high tone plateau. In this pattern, two high tones are at the same level, and the voice remains continuously high from one the other. A plateau can occur between two lexical tones, as in the following example: * 'it is in Uganda' A plateau also often occurs between a phrasal tone and lexical tone, or between two phrasal tones: * 'in the north of Uganda'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 26. * 'he wants to cultivate bananas' A third type of tonal pattern, not quite so common, is to have a series of low tones followed by a jump to a high one: * 'Mbarara is a city'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 138. * 'ten books'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 103. These three tonal patterns occur regularly in Luganda sentences, and much of the description below concerns when to use one and when another.


Types of tone

There are various types of high tone in Luganda, of which lexical, grammatical and phrasal tones are the most important. To these can be added boundary tones and other tones indicating intonation.


Lexical tones

Lexical high tones are those that go with particular words, such as those on the words below: * 'city' * 'country' When a word with final tone such as 'country' is spoken in isolation or at the end of a sentence, the tone is always heard as a falling tone; but in other contexts, it is generally heard as an ordinary high tone. Falling lexical tones can also be heard in non-final position: * 'hospital' Some words in Luganda have two lexical high tones. When this happens the two tones link into a plateau; that is, the syllables between are also raised. (In this article, a plateau is shown by underlining.) * '(the city of)
Kampala Kampala (, ) is the capital and largest city of Uganda. The city proper has a population of 1,680,000 and is divided into the five political divisions of Kampala Central Division, Kawempe Division, Makindye Division, Nakawa Division, and Ruba ...
' * 'shop' A lexical tone, if it does not form a plateau with a following lexical tone, is always followed by a low tone. This low tone can either be in the following syllable, as in 'city' or the second half (mora) of a syllable containing a falling tone, as in 'hospital' or 'country'.


Grammatical tones

A grammatical tone is one that arises when a verb is used in a particular tense. For example, a verb in the subjunctive mood always has a high or falling tone on the last syllable:''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 182. * 'you should come in, please come in' In this article, to distinguish them from phrasal high tones, lexical and grammatical tones are marked in bold.


Phrasal tones

Phrasal tones are high tones automatically added to words in certain contexts. In other contexts, the same word may be pronounced without phrasal tones. For example, when a word without lexical tones is the subject of a sentence, or followed by a number or quantity word, it remains toneless: * 'Mbarara is a city' * 'ten books' But in most other contexts, or when spoken in isolation, the word has a high tone on all the syllables except the first
mora Mora may refer to: People * Mora (surname) Places Sweden * Mora, Säter, Sweden * Mora, Sweden, the seat of Mora Municipality * Mora Municipality, Sweden United States * Mora, Louisiana, an unincorporated community * Mora, Minnesota, a city * M ...
of the word (the phrasal tones are shown here by being underlined): * 'books' * 'in the north' A geminate consonant such as 'tt''counts as one mora, and so if a word begins with a geminate consonant, the phrasal tone can begin immediately after it: * '(the kingdom of) Toro'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 29. * 'you (sg.)' * 'it is a school' Since a rising tone becomes a level high tone in Luganda, the following word also has a high tone throughout: * 'yes' Phrasal tones can also be added to the end of words that have a lexical high tone. However, between the lexical tone and the phrasal tones there must always be at least one low-toned syllable or mora: * 'we are going' * 'south' If the lexical tone is a falling one, the second half the syllable with the tone counts as a low-toned mora, and the phrasal tones begin immediately on the following syllable: * 'hospital' * 'Baganda people' Whenever a word has a lexical as well as a phrasal tone like this, the lexical tone and the phrasal tone do not form a plateau but instead there is a sequence HLH. As with every sequence HLH, the second H (which is the phrasal tone) is a little lower than the first. A lexical or grammatical tone cannot form a plateau with a following phrasal tone; there is always at least one low-toned mora in between. However, a phrasal tone can very easily form a plateau with a following lexical tone or phrasal tone: * 'in the village of Masindi' * 'we are going into the street' * 'he wants to cultivate bananas' More examples of this are given below, as well as exceptions where no plateau is formed. Phrasal tones tend to be less prominent than lexical tones and pronounced at a lower pitch. Often in a sentence if a word with lexical tone is substituted for one with a phrasal tone, the pitch is higher.


Words containing HLL or HLLL

Normally between a lexical or grammatical high tone in Luganda and a phrasal tone, there is just one low-toned syllable or mora. However there are some words in which a high lexical or grammatical tone is followed not by one, but by two or even three low-toned syllables: * 'they will see'Hyman & Katamba (1993), p.45. * 'they who will see' The existence of such words greatly complicates the description of Luganda tones and has important implications for theoretical accounts of the language. These are further discussed below.


Intonational tones

As well as the types of tone mentioned above, there are also intonational tones such as those that distinguish a question from a statement. For example, if a toneless word asks a yes-no question, it has a low tone on the final syllable. Compare these two: * 'it is a school' * 'is it a school?'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 242. A question like the following has a rise-and-fall on the last vowel: * 'is it the one I see there?' Another type of intonational tone is an upglide sometimes heard just before a pause mid-sentence. It is referred to by Stevick (1968) as 'comma intonation',''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xxiii. and it is a kind of
boundary tone The term boundary tone refers to a rise or fall in pitch that occurs in speech at the end of a sentence or other utterance, or, if a sentence is divided into two or more Prosodic unit, intonational phrases, at the end of each intonational phrase. I ...
.


Tones and emphasis

Luganda does not use tones for focus or emphasis. As Crabtree says, 'The tone in Luganda is level, therefore it is impossible to emphasize as in English.' Instead he lists some other ways a Luganda speaker can emphasise words, such as placing the important word first, omitting an initial vowel where it would normally be added, using a relative construction (e.g. 'books are what I want'), using a negative construction (e.g., 'what I want, is it not books?') and others.


Downdrift (catathesis)

The usual pattern when two words each have lexical or grammatical high tone is that the tone of the second word is lower than the first. The syllables in between are a little lower than the high tones, making a dip: * 'cities in the country'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xviii. * 'all of them are girls' * 'he cuts the tree'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xi. * 'in the city of Kampala' * 'those cities' This is known as downdrift, catathesis, or
automatic downstep Automatic may refer to: Music Bands * Automatic (band), Australian rock band * Automatic (American band), American rock band * The Automatic, a Welsh alternative rock band Albums * ''Automatic'' (Jack Bruce album), a 1983 electronic roc ...
. Downdrift does not occur if two lexical tones are in the same word, as in . In this case there is a plateau. There is also usually a lowering of the tone if the first word ends in a lexical tone and the second word begins with one: * 'many yams'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xxii. The falling tone in 'yams' changes to a high tone in this context, but there is still a downstep just as if the L part of the HL was still audible. There is always downdrift when a phrasal tone follows a lexical one: * 'it is in Bunyoro'


Plateauing


Lexical tone plateauing

As noted above, the usual pattern with words containing lexical tones is for each word in a series to be a little lower-pitched than the one before. However, in some circumstances two lexical tones are on the same level and form a plateau.


Phrases with 'of'

Typical of such phrases are those containing the word - 'of', which forms a plateau not only with the preceding high tone but also with the following one, for example: * 'in the south of Uganda' The plateau is shown here by underlining. If the second word is toneless, however, a plateau is made only with the preceding word: * 'the boy's bell' (shortened from )


Verb + Location

Another kind of phrase that often has plateauing is 'verb + location', for example: * 'it is in Buganda' * 'they are going to Wandegeya'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xix. * 'I bought them in Kampala'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 167. * 'you put (present tense) it on the table'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 168. * 'this place is called Kibuli' Sometimes there can be a slight dip in this kind of phrase, e.g. * 'it is in the south of Uganda' But even here the three underlying high tones are on the same pitch and do not drift downwards. However, there is usually no plateauing in this type of phrase when the verb is relative: * 'which is in Buganda' (with downdrift)''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 219. There is also no plateauing when the verb is negative: * 'they don't come from Uganda' There is also no plateauing between a lexical tone and a following phrasal tone: * 'it is in Bunyoro'


Verb + focussed object

A plateau is also possible between verb and object, when the object is emphasised or focussed. Contrast: * 'they buy cups' * 'they buy CUPS' (not something else)


'And'

Another situation where plateauing follows a lexical tone is after the word 'and', which has a lexical high tone when used before a noun: * (pronounced ) 'Uganda and Kenya' * 'the beans and the peanuts' * 'and girls' But as usual there is no plateau between the tone of and a following phrasal tone: * 'the peanuts and the beans' According to Hyman (2017), historically the word itself is underlyingly toneless, and the tone comes from the augment of the noun (i.e. the initial ''e-'' or ''a-'' or ''o-''), which in an earlier stage of the language was high-toned.Hyman (2017), p. 170. is in fact toneless in phrases like the following, when it is followed by a 'narrative tense' verb (a 'narrative tense' verb is a form of relative clause verb without its initial vowel, used after ): * 'and they cultivate' The word 'they have' (literally 'they are with') contains the word 'with'. This is followed by a plateau when positive, but not when negative: * 'they have many yams' * 'they don't have many yams'


Verb + time

A plateau is heard before words like 'yesterday', 'the day before yesterday', and 'when?' in these sentences: * 'I washed this shirt yesterday' * 'I cut my hair the day before yesterday' * 'when did you arrive here?' But there is no preceding plateau if the time adverb is toneless, such as 'a long time ago'. Instead the phrasal tone of the adverb makes a plateau with the following word: * 'I bought this shirt a long time ago'


Phrasal tone plateauing

In contrast to lexical tones, words with a phrasal tone very easily make a plateau with the following word, as the following examples show (the plateaus are indicated by underlining): * 'in the north of Uganda' * 'he comes from Buganda' * 'people in the city' * 'in the village of Masindi' * 'the beans that they bought' * 'he wants to cultivate bananas' The phrasal high tone at the end of words like 'we are going' also forms a plateau in the same way, for example: * 'we are going into the street' * 'they are cooking (staple food)'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xvii. * 'large hospitals' Note that in these examples, it is not the lexical tone of words like , which forms a plateau with the high tone which follows, but the phrasal tone at the end of the word. So there is first downdrift in and then a plateau. In a sentence like the following, in which an HLH word like is used in a 'verb + location' sentence where the location has a lexical tone, according to Stevick, the plateau in such sentences starts with the lexical tone. However, the speaker on the recordings of the Luganda Basic Course in sentences of this kind makes a plateau starting only with the second tone, so that there is a downstep first then a plateau: * 'we are going to Uganda' (according to Stevick) * 'we are going to Uganda' (as read on the recordings)


Phrasal tone downdrift

A phrasal tone is usually followed by a plateau, which continues either to the next high tone or, if there is no high tone, to the end of the phrase. Nonetheless, there are some kinds of phrases where the phrasal tones continue only as far as the end of the word, followed by a low tone. The following high tone is lower than the phrasal tone (i.e., there is catathesis or downdrift). An example of these types of phrases is when a noun is followed by the pronominal words 'these', 'the aforesaid', 'all', or 'alone' (or their equivalents in other noun classes), e.g.''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xx. * 'these people' * 'the aforementioned people' * 'all people' * 'the person alone' * 'all those bananas' However, there is plateauing before demonstrative adjectives of the ''-li'' type: * 'those people' Two other contexts where there is downdrift after a phrasal tone word are before ''nga'' 'when, if, as' and before ''nti'' meaning 'that': * 'they talked as they were eating' * 'he says that...' (The word ''nga'' in this context is toneless, but before a noun it has a tone: 'like sugar'. It also has a tone when it means 'how...!': 'how beautiful it is here!') There is a similar downstep after a personal pronoun in phrases like the following: * 'I am Mukasa' * 'who are you?'


Low tones then high

The third common intonational pattern in Luganda is a series of Low tones followed by a High. This is found only if the first word is toneless. The following are some circumstances when no phrasal tones are added to a toneless word, and it has low tones throughout. First, when it is the subject or topic of a sentence (unless it is a personal pronoun like 'you sg.'): * 'Mbarara is a city'. A toneless word also remains low-toned before a numeral or quantity word (except after a negative verb), e.g. * 'ten books' * 'many people' * 'how many bananas?' The word ''buli'' 'each' also remains low-toned when followed by another word: * 'each day' * 'every book' An adverb or a subordinate clause can also form the topic of a sentence and be low-toned, e.g. * 'afterwards, they eat (staple food)' * 'when he wants beans, he buys them'


Falling tones

A high or a low tone may be found on any vowel, but a falling tone is found only on: *(a) a final vowel, e.g. 'egg' *(b) a long vowel, e.g. 'to dream'Dutcher & Paster (2008), p. 127 *(c) a vowel followed by a prenasalised consonant, e.g. 'Baganda people' *(d) a vowel following a consonant + semivowel, e.g. 'to fall sick' *(e) a short vowel followed by a geminate consonant, e.g. 'to throb'. When a falling tone occurs on a syllable closed by a geminate, such as in 'to become poor', the fall is very slight and hard to hear, though it can be measured instrumentally. The main way of telling that a word like this has a falling tone is that the tone on the following vowel is high.


Morae

One way of explaining these facts is to analyse Luganda words as consisting of
morae A mora (plural ''morae'' or ''moras''; often symbolized μ) is a basic timing unit in the phonology of some spoken languages, equal to or shorter than a syllable. For example, a short syllable such as ''ba'' consists of one mora (''monomoraic'') ...
or moras, that is, speech segments each lasting a certain time. According to this analysis, a short vowel has one mora and a long vowel has two morae. A 'long' consonant such as ''gg'', ''mb'', or ''ly'' also has one mora. Thus the third syllable ' of can be said to be long by position, since it has two morae, one belonging to itself and the other 'borrowed from' or 'shared with' the prenasalised consonant that follows. A long syllable can have a falling tone, with the first mora high and the second mora low. Certain accommodations must be made to make the model fit. For example, an initial syllable starting with a vowel always counts as one mora, even in words like 'country' where the vowel is long and followed by a prenasalised consonant.''Luganda Basic Course'', p. xiv. No syllable can have more than two morae. For example, the second syllable of 'beer' has only two, despite starting with ''mw'' and being followed by a prenasalised consonant.


Final vowels

Final vowels are usually pronounced short, but in some words (including all words with monosyllabic stems) the vowel becomes long before a suffix, for example 'which country?'. Final vowels that can become long are considered to have two morae. Certain other final vowels, such as the final ''-é'' of the subjunctive mood, are considered to have one mora. A final vowel therefore, if it is not toneless, can either have a high tone on the second mora (e.g. 'one') or on the first mora (e.g. 'nine'), or on its single mora ( 'please come in'). All three of these, when at the end of a sentence, are pronounced with a falling tone. In other contexts they have different pronunciations. For example, before the suffix 'what?' a tone on the first mora of a bimoraic final vowel falls: ( 'what country?') but a tone on the last mora will remain high ( 'what should we do?'). If a word ends in a falling tone, the tone becomes an ordinary high tone in some circumstances. One of these is when it is the subject of a sentence: * 'Kampala is a city' * 'are all of them girls?' Another is before a quantity word: * 'many yams' Although there are now two high tones in adjacent syllables, nonetheless a downstep still occurs just as if the L part of the falling tone were still audible, so that in the above phrase ''mú'' is slightly lower in pitch than ''gú''.


Nouns

Luganda nouns tend to fall tonally into certain regular patterns, of which the most common are (a) toneless (b) tone on the second mora from the end (c) tone on the third mora from the end. These three patterns together account for about 83% of nouns in Luganda. Some examples of the commonest patterns are as follows.


Toneless nouns

Judging from the numbers in the word list at the end of the ''Luganda Basic Course'', about one third of all nouns (32%) in Luganda are underlyingly toneless. However, when pronounced in isolation, they have phrasal tones on all but the first mora (counting ''en-'' at the beginning of a word as one mora), as follows: * 'book' * 'school' * 'person' * 'shoe(s)' * 'work, job' * 'boy' * 'mouth' * 'paper' * 'cow(s)' * 'relish' * 'milk'


Penultimate tone

Also very common, about 26% of the words, are nouns with a penultimate tone, that is on the second mora from the end of the word. If the penultimate syllable is long, as in 'lake', both moras are high-toned. What all these nouns have in common is that the last vowel cannot take a phrasal tone. Examples are: * 'chair' * 'city' * 'goat' * 'cup' * 'hand, arm' * 'lake' * 'money' * 'coffee'


Antepenultimate tone

Nouns with a high tone on the third mora from the end of the word (e.g., 'bicycle') are also common, and the various types listed below account for at least 25% of the vocabulary. When used before a pause, or before a pronominal word like 'these' or 'all' (see above) these words acquire a phrasal tone on the final syllable: * 'that bicycle' However, in other contexts no phrasal tone is added, and there is no plateau with the following word: * 'last year' * 'I didn't drink water for breakfast'.''Luganda Basic Course'', p.141. Contrast the following example, where the phrasal tone of 'milk' makes a plateau with the following word. * 'I didn't drink milk for breakfast' Some nouns of this type are: * 'eyes' * 'child' * 'year' * 'month' * 'tomatoes' * 'water' * 'tea' * 'sugar' * 'bicycle' * 'ship' * 'part' * 'name' * 'Baganda people' To these can be added a few nouns with the tone on the antepenultimate syllable, which are all marked by Stevick as HLL: * 'west' * 'east' * 'fruit' * 'workshop' * 'teacher' Hyman draws attention to the word ('fruit'), which is unusual in having an accent on the class-prefix. He suggests that this is either because it may be a borrowing from another Ugandan language, Soga, or because it is a derivative of the verb ('bear fruit'). A few nouns (mostly foreign) have a double tone followed by LL: * 'America' * 'Muslim' * 'French (language)' * 'lemon' (Portuguese ''limão'') * 'brick'


Falling tone on the final

About 9% of the nouns have a falling tone on the final. The shorter of these nouns (up to three moras) have a single tone: * 'country' * 'egg' * 'dog' * 'yam(s)' * 'tree' The longer nouns have a second tone earlier in the word, which links into a plateau: * 'class' * 'prison' * 'board' * 'shop' * 'breakfast' * 'direction' A less common pattern is for a noun to have a tone on the penultimate and the final:Hyman & Katamba (1993), p. 62. * 'driver' * 'heir'


Other patterns

A very few words (about 2%) have the tone far enough from the end of the word to allow for two phrasal tones following the HL of the lexical tone: * 'the south' * 'hospital' Other patterns are possible, for example 'Wednesday' (ending in HLLL), but these patterns account for only a small percentage of the nouns.


Variable tone nouns

Certain words in Luganda have a high tone on the third mora, and the tone shifts to the following mora when the word is used without its initial vowel: * 'Baganda people' - 'they are Baganda' * 'teacher' - 'he is a teacher' * 'girl' - 'she is a girl' * 'drunkard' - 'he is a drunkard' Hyman and Katamba note that the same alternations take place in certain verb tenses: * 'he who buys' - 'he who buys them' * 'he who commands' - 'he who commands us' * 'he who helps' - 'he who helps us' A similar alternation occurs in numbers 1-5, and in the words for 'yours' and 'his', with two differences: firstly the tone comes on the second mora, and secondly with a monosyllabic stem, the tone on the final is not deleted: * - 'three (e.g. books)' * - 'four' * - 'your ones (e.g. books)' A few foreign nouns (mostly from Swahili) are also irregular, in that they have an extra tone in the plural or in the diminutive where the prefix has an extra syllable: * 'bowl' - plural 'bowls' * 'sack' - plural 'sacks' * 'pen, pencil' - plural * 'horse' - diminutive 'little horse'


Possessive pronouns ('my', 'our' etc.)

Possessive pronouns in Luganda are of two types, those with two syllables, namely 'my', 'our', 'your (pl.)', (pronounced 'their' and those with one syllable, namely 'your' and 'his, her, its'. The two-syllable possessives used on their own have an HLL tone: 'my one (e.g. place, book, etc.)',''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 172. 'our home'. However, when they are used with a noun, they become enclitic, and if the noun is HLL this tone goes on the final vowel of the noun, making a plateau with the earlier tone: * (before a pause, ) 'my name'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 2-3. * 'my teacher'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 163. * 'my bicycle' * 'our tea'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 157. * 'our water' If added to a noun with a falling tone on the final, the final tone changes from falling to high: * 'my country' * 'my shop' * 'our eggs' Otherwise if the noun has penultimate tone, the tone on the final vowel is deleted by Meeussen's rule (HH > HL): * 'my city' When used with a toneless noun, however, the high tone migrates from the final syllable to the third mora of the noun. The tones that follow it are all L: * 'my book'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 184. * '(it is) my book' * 'their books' * 'my plantain tree'Hyman & Katamba (1993), p. 49. * 'my key' * 'my paper' (The above rules are those given in the literature. In practice, however, the reader on the ''Luganda Basic Course'' recordings sometimes adds a tone on the final syllable of the noun even where it is theoretically not permitted: 'their money', 'our loaves', where the text writes , 'my book'.) When the noun is a foreign borrowing, such as 'table-cloth' or 'letters', it is reported that the high tone plateau starts not on the accented mora, but the second mora of the word: * 'our table cloth' * 'my letters' With a monosyllabic possessive namely 'your' or 'his', the tones are different. The first tone remains in the same place as before, then there is a plateau from the first tone to the end: * 'your book'''Luganda Basic Course'', p. 56. * 'your name' * 'your city' * 'his bicycle' But when the noun has a tone on the final syllable, it becomes a high tone, and the tone of - is suppressed by Meeussen's rule (HH > HL): * 'your country' * 'in your class'


Verbs


High and low-toned verbs

Like many Bantu languages, Luganda has high-toned and low-toned verbs. In the infinitive, low-toned verbs have the usual phrasal tones on all but the first mora: * 'to grind' * 'to sweep' * 'to shut' * 'to come' * 'to wait' * 'to study, read' * to teach' * 'to buy' High-toned verbs (which are about 60% of verbs) have a high tone on the mora immediately following the infinitive prefix ''oku-''. Phrasal tones are added only in the case of longer verbs: * 'to eat' * 'to drink' * 'to send' * 'to see' * 'to work, to do' * 'to get, obtain' * 'to sing' * 'to begin' * 'to enter'


Meeussen's rule (HH > HL)

Verbs in Luganda are particularly affected by a rule known as
Meeussen's rule Meeussen's rule is a special case of tone reduction in Bantu languages. The tonal alternation it describes is the lowering, in some contexts, of the last tone of a pattern of two adjacent High tones (HH), resulting in the pattern HL. The phenomenon ...
, which is common in many African languages, whereby a sequence of tones HH becomes HL. Similarly HHH becomes HLL and HHHH becomes HLLL. (This rule does not affect nouns in Luganda.) Thus * 'they will see' theoretically has three high tones, one for the prefix ''bá-'' 'they', one for the future tense-marker ''-lí-'', and one for the verb-stem itself ''lába'' 'see'. However, after the operation of Meeussen's rule, and the addition of a phrasal tone, it changes as follows:Hyman & Katamba (1993), pp. 36, 45. * * > 'they will see' The important point here is that a phrasal tone cannot be added (except on the very last syllable before a pause) to any syllable that formerly had a high tone. Thus in the above word the remaining lexical tone on ''bá'' is followed not by one low-toned syllable, but by two. Hyman and Katamba give the following examples to illustrate how a lowered H cannot acquire a phrasal tone or form a plateau: * 'they will see cups' (with a plateau), where is derived from * * 'they who will see cups' (with downdrift), where is derived from * To make sense of the tones of Luganda verbs therefore, it is necessary to consider not only what tones the verb actually has, but also the underlying tones it had before the operation of Meeussen's rule.


Tones in tenses

Various elements add a tone to verbs: *The tone of the subject prefix. This usually has a tone if it is a
diphone In phonetics, a diphone is an adjacent pair of phones in an utterance. For example, in aɪfəʊn the diphones are a ɪ ªf É™ ™ÊŠ Šn The term is usually used to refer to a recording of the transition between two phones. In the following d ...
(consisting of two phonemes) such as 'they', 'we', - 'it' etc, but usually toneless if it is monophonic (consisting of one phoneme), e.g. ''a''- 'he/she', 'I', - 'you (sg.)' etc. (For an exception see below on relative clause verbs.) *The tone of the tense-marker. The tense-markers -- (Near Past), -- (
Near Future The future is the time after the past and present. Its arrival is considered inevitable due to the existence of time and the laws of physics. Due to the apparent nature of reality and the unavoidability of the future, everything that currently ...
), -- (General Future), -- ('still') all add a tone, while -- (Far Past) adds a tone in the following syllable. (The tense-markers -- 'not yet' and -- 'just' do not add a tone; there is also no tone in the ending used to make the habitual aspect.) *The tone of the verb-stem, if it is high-toned. In the Infinitive and General Future this tone is on the first mora only, but in the Present tense it affects the first two moras. *The tone of the negative marker. The 1st person negative marker has its own tone. The negative marker with other persons is , which adds a tone on the following syllable. In relative-clause verbs the negative marker is --. *In addition, many tenses add a grammatical tone on the final syllable. In longer verbs, in some cases this tone may move to the penultimate syllable. Having added these tones, the following rules apply: *Any sequence HLH (HLLH, HLLLH) becomes a plateau by the plateauing rule, for example becomes 'they do not buy'. *Any sequence HH (HHH, HHHH) becomes HL (HLL, HLLL) by Meeussen's rule, unless there is a plateau; for example becomes 'they see'. *Phrasal tones are added to the end of the verb, except that: :(a) A phrasal tone is not added to any syllable with the tone deleted by Meeussen's rule, except at the end of a sentence or before pronominal words such as 'all'. :(b) A phrasal tone also does not directly follow the General Future infix -- in low-toned verbs, even if the tone of -- is deleted.


Relative clause verbs

Relative clause verbs have a different intonation from ordinary verbs in Luganda. They are more commonly used than in English, since as Crabtree pointed out (1902) they are used for emphasis. For example, instead of 'who bought things?' a Luganda-speaker would say 'which are the ones who bought things?' * Similarly, instead of 'he went to Buganda to teach', a Luganda-speaker might say 'what he went to Buganda for is to teach': * 'what he went to Buganda for is to teach' An initial vowel is usually added before diphone subject-prefixes such as (e.g. 'they who buy'), but not before monophonic prefixes such as ''a-''. However, this initial vowel disappears in certain contexts, such as the second example above. In object clauses, such as the following, a toneless prefix acquires a tone: * 'the staple food that she is cooking' But when an object copula is used as in the following sentence, both kinds of prefix lose their tone: * 'the staple food is what they are cooking'. The word , , etc. itself usually has no tone. However, the rules for such clauses can be complex.


Examples of tenses

The tables that follow give examples of six commonly used tenses, together with the subjunctive mood and some comments on each. In the tables two verbs are used, 'buy' and - 'see', as examples of low and high-toned verbs respectively.


Present tense

The underlying tones of the 3rd person plural of the high-toned verb change by Meeussen's rule as follows: * * > 'they see' (HHH > HLL) That is, the first ''two'' moras of the verb-stem in this tense are underlyingly high. (Compare 'they vomit'; 'they begin'.) When an object-infix such as ''-gu-'' 'it (e.g. bread)' is added, the tones change as follows: * * > 'they see it' The negative and relative versions of this tense all have a grammatical tone on the final vowel, which in fact has two moras and is underlyingly *''-aá''. In a two-mora high-toned verb, this final tone disappears by Meeussen's rule, but it reappears and makes a plateau when the verb-stem has three moras or more: * 'they do not see' (HHHH > HLL) * 'they do not bring' (HHLH > HHH) When the irregular verb 'is (in a certain location)' is used in a relative clause, a high tone is placed on the final vowel when the prefix is toneless. But when the prefix has a tone, the tone on the final is deleted by Meeussen's rule. The tone therefore varies according to whether the prefix is a monophone or diphone: * 'he is' - 'who is' * 'they are' - 'who are' The two words and , although both end in high tones, are pronounced differently in contexts such as the following, where the tone of is higher and does not make a plateau: * 'he is in Buganda' * 'who is in Buganda'


Perfect tense

The Perfect tense uses a different stem from the Present (e.g. instead of 'buy'), and there is an underlying high tone on the ending. In longer (3-mora) low-toned verbs, such as 'go' or 'hide (something)', the final tone moves to the penultimate syllable in the basic form: * 'she has gone' (not * as one might expect) All the forms of this tense have a tone on the final vowel, but the basic form is different from the negative and relative. In high-toned verbs, Meeussen's rule applies in the basic form (e.g. 'they have seen'), but in the negative and relative forms there is a plateau instead ( they have not seen'). Another example, using the 1st person negative marker , which keeps its own tone, is the following: * 'I have understood' vs. 'I have not understood'


Near Past tense

The Near Past tense uses the same verb-stem as the Perfect tense but with the tense marker -''á''-. The subject prefixes change to ''yá-'' 'he' and ''báá-'' 'they'. The final vowel once again is -ê''. In low-toned verbs the subject prefix makes a plateau with the grammatical tone on the final vowel: * 'he bought (today)' (from 'to buy') In longer low-toned verbs in this tense the final tone moves to the second mora of the penultimate syllable: * 'he hid (today)' (from 'to hide something') In high-toned verbs in this tense there is always a plateau even in the basic form of the verb (in this it differs from the Perfect tense above). Contrast: * 'he has seen' (from 'to see') * 'he saw (today)'


Far Past tense

The tense-infix of this tense is ''a'', which puts a tone on the following syllable. Although the forms in the table above do not appear to have a high tone on the final, in fact there is an underlying high tone, which reappears and makes a plateau in forms like the following: * 'he hid it' Another indication that there is an underlying high tone on the final vowel is the fact that forms like 'they bought' do not add a phrasal tone on the final syllable (except before a pause or before a pronominal word like 'all').


Near Future tense

The Near Future tense has a tense-marker --. In the relative and negative forms, there is an (underlying) grammatical tone on the final vowel. In the negative of this tense, the final vowel changes to ''-e''. In the second person singular -- becomes : * * > 'you (sg.) will eat'


General Future tense

This tense has a tone on the tense-marker . The tone of this disappears by Meeussen's rule after a high-toned subject prefix. A peculiarity of this tense is that with a low-toned verb, the syllable after cannot bear a phrasal tone, even when the tone of itself is deleted by Meeussen's rule. The forms given above differ from those given by Stevick, who states that in this tense as in the Present the first two moras of a high-toned verb stem have underlying tone. However, the examples given by Hyman and Katamba (e.g. 'they will hear') imply that only the first mora of a high-toned verb has an underlying tone in this tense. Contrast the Present tense example below, in which both syllables of are low, with the Future tense, where only the second syllable has a phrasal tone: * 'they see bread' * 'they will see cups'


Subjunctive mood

* 'he should buy' * 'he should see' * 'they should buy' * 'they should see' The subjunctive mood has just a single tone on the final vowel, which deletes all earlier tones in the verb. Before a pause, this tone becomes a falling tone, but before 'what?', it remains high: * 'please come in, you should come in' * 'what should we do?' Contrast the following, where the final vowel has a falling tone and two moras: * 'what country?' er The subjunctive has no relative clause or negative form, but a negative may be made by using the subjunctive of the verb ''okúlémá'' 'to fail' plus the infinitive. * 'they should not come in'


Object infixes

An object infix such as 'him/her' or 'them' can be added to a verb before the verb-root. In the infinitive, object infixes have a tone:Hyman (2017), p. 168. * 'to tie him/her' * 'to tie them' However, in the present tense, they are toneless: * 'he ties him/her' But the reflexive infix is always high-toned, even in the present tense: * 'to tie oneself' * 'he ties himself/she ties herself'


See also

Chichewa tones Chichewa (a Bantu language of Central Africa, also known as Chewa, Nyanja, or Chinyanja) is the main language spoken in south and central Malawi, and to a lesser extent in Zambia, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. Like most other Bantu languages, it is to ...


Bibliography

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''Language Sciences'' 31, 213–238. *Hyman, Larry M. & Francis X. Katamba (1990). "Final vowel shortening in Luganda". ''Studies in African Linguistics'' 21, 1-59. * Hyman, Larry M. & Francis X. Katamba (1993)
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Foreign Service Institute, Washington. Sound files of this course are available free on the Internet. * Kamoga, F. K. & Stevick, E. W. (1968). ''Luganda Pretraining Program''. Foreign Service Institute, Washington. * Meeussen, A. E. (1974)
"Notes on Tone in Ganda"
''Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies'', Vol. 37, No. 1, pp. 148–156. * Myers, Scott; Selkirk, Elisabeth; Fainleib, Yelena (2018)
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References

{{reflist, 2 Bantu languages Languages of Uganda Tonal languages Tone (linguistics)