Abui Phonology

This thesis deals with the lexical and grammatical tone in Abui, a Papuan language of Eastern Indonesia. Abui belongs to the Alor branch of the Timor-Alor-Pantar family, whose wider genetic affiliation is presently unresolved. The thesis starts with an overview of the current research and brings...

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Main Author: Benidiktus Delpada
Other Authors: Frantisek Kratochvil
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69400
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-694002019-12-10T12:36:54Z Abui Phonology Benidiktus Delpada Frantisek Kratochvil School of Humanities and Social Sciences Language and Communication Centre DRNTU::Social sciences This thesis deals with the lexical and grammatical tone in Abui, a Papuan language of Eastern Indonesia. Abui belongs to the Alor branch of the Timor-Alor-Pantar family, whose wider genetic affiliation is presently unresolved. The thesis starts with an overview of the current research and brings some new facts about Abui oral history and culture. The second chapter offers an update of Abui segmental phonetics and phonology, in particular focusing on the phonemic status of the uvular stop /q/ and on the micro-variation within the northern dialects of Abui, such as Fanating, Atimelang, Mainang, and Takalelang, the main place of this study. The third chapter examines lexical tone in Abui. Abui is a low-density lexical tone language, which means that tone is associated only with certain syllables and minimal pairs are relatively sparse. The chapter surveys known tone systems and characterizes the Abui type. Further, the chapter examines how lexical tone is affected by derivational (compounding) and inflectional processes (person and aspect inflection). The fourth chapter examines the behavior of lexical tones in the context of the sentence, where a number of phrasal tones are identified, not unlike in the recently described and related Fataluku language of East Timor. Phrasal boundary tones interact with the lexical tone and syntactic structure in a complex manner. The data is illustrated extensively with recordings, but this study is more qualitative in nature, given the complexity of the task, and the fact that this is the first venture into the problem of lexical and grammatical tone in this language. Master of Arts (HSS) 2016-12-23T06:49:00Z 2016-12-23T06:49:00Z 2016 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69400 en 175 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
Benidiktus Delpada
Abui Phonology
description This thesis deals with the lexical and grammatical tone in Abui, a Papuan language of Eastern Indonesia. Abui belongs to the Alor branch of the Timor-Alor-Pantar family, whose wider genetic affiliation is presently unresolved. The thesis starts with an overview of the current research and brings some new facts about Abui oral history and culture. The second chapter offers an update of Abui segmental phonetics and phonology, in particular focusing on the phonemic status of the uvular stop /q/ and on the micro-variation within the northern dialects of Abui, such as Fanating, Atimelang, Mainang, and Takalelang, the main place of this study. The third chapter examines lexical tone in Abui. Abui is a low-density lexical tone language, which means that tone is associated only with certain syllables and minimal pairs are relatively sparse. The chapter surveys known tone systems and characterizes the Abui type. Further, the chapter examines how lexical tone is affected by derivational (compounding) and inflectional processes (person and aspect inflection). The fourth chapter examines the behavior of lexical tones in the context of the sentence, where a number of phrasal tones are identified, not unlike in the recently described and related Fataluku language of East Timor. Phrasal boundary tones interact with the lexical tone and syntactic structure in a complex manner. The data is illustrated extensively with recordings, but this study is more qualitative in nature, given the complexity of the task, and the fact that this is the first venture into the problem of lexical and grammatical tone in this language.
author2 Frantisek Kratochvil
author_facet Frantisek Kratochvil
Benidiktus Delpada
format Theses and Dissertations
author Benidiktus Delpada
author_sort Benidiktus Delpada
title Abui Phonology
title_short Abui Phonology
title_full Abui Phonology
title_fullStr Abui Phonology
title_full_unstemmed Abui Phonology
title_sort abui phonology
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69400
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