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A Historical Phonology of Central Chadic: Prosodies and Lexical Reconstruction

Hardback

Main Details

Title A Historical Phonology of Central Chadic: Prosodies and Lexical Reconstruction
Authors and Contributors      By (author) H. Ekkehard Wolff
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:320
Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 158
Category/GenreLanguage - history and general works
linguistics
Historical and comparative linguistics
Phonetics and phonology
ISBN/Barcode 9781316519547
ClassificationsDewey:493.77
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations Worked examples or Exercises

Publishing Details

Publisher Cambridge University Press
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publication Date 2 June 2022
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Of all of the African language families, the Chadic languages belonging to the Afroasiatic macro-family are highly internally diverse due to a long history and various scenarios of language contact. This pioneering study explores the development of the sound systems of the 'Central Chadic' languages, a major branch of the Chadic family. Drawing on and comparing field data from about 60 different Central Chadic languages, H. Ekkehard Wolff unpacks the specific phonological principles that underpin the Chadic languages' diverse phonological evolution, arguing that their diversity results to no little extent from historical processes of 'prosodification' of reconstructable segments of the proto-language. The book offers meticulous historical analyses of some 60 words from Proto-Central Chadic, in up to 60 individual modern languages, including both consonants and vowels. Particular emphasis is on tracing the deep-rooted origin and impact of palatalisation and labialisation prosodies within a phonological system that, on its deepest level, recognises only one vowel phoneme */a/.

Author Biography

H. Ekkehard Wolff is Professor and Chair emeritus (African linguistics) at Leipzig University. He has more than 170 publications to his credit (incl. 30 books) on descriptive, typological, comparative, applied linguistics and sociolinguistics of African languages. He is Editor of The Cambridge Handbook of African Linguistics (2019) and of A History of African Linguistics (2019).