Abstract
Tonosyntax in the Dogon languages of Mali is characterized by word-level tone overlays that apply in specific morphosyntactic contexts. This paper focuses on the resolution of competitions that arise when a word is targeted by more than one tone overlay. For example, in Poss N Adj the possessor and the adjective compete to impose their respective tone overlays on (at least) the noun, and Dogon languages show different outcomes. We argue that overlays are tonal morphemes associated with particular syntactic positions and propose a series of phrasal Optimality Theoretic constraints, grounded in syntactic structure, that control the association of these morphemes. The relative ranking of constraints determines the outcome of tonosyntactic competitions in a given language.
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Notes
Here and elsewhere, tonal overlays are indicated both by tone marking on the word (using acute accent for H and grave accent for L) and by a superscript of the melody, located on the right side of the target if it is controlled from the right and on the left side of the target if it is controlled from the left. For example, the superscript L in (b) indicates a {L} tone overlay from the adjective on the right. The segmental transcription system is roughly IPA, with the following differences: <j> stands for IPA [], <y> stands for IPA [j], <r> stands for IPA []; nasalization is marked with a superscript n (vn); vowel and consonant length is marked by doubling the letter.
Verbal tone patterns in Tommo So, as in most Dogon languages, display only a /H/ vs. /LH/ contrast, which is largely predictable based on the initial segment.
The following abbreviations pertain to possessors: Poss = possessor, P = pronominal, I = inalienable, A = alienable. Thus, PossIP is an inalienable pronominal possessor, while PossNonP is a nonpronominal possessor (with undetermined alienability).
In phrase-final position, toneless elements interpolate between the preceding specified tone and a phrase-final L boundary tone, producing a linearly falling F0. While this phonetic realization on a single syllable resembles a specified L tone (which is subject to some carryover from a preceding H), the difference emerges with two or more syllables: underspecified syllables show linear interpolation across the whole sequence, while L-toned syllables reach the L target (typically) by the end of the first syllable. See McPherson (2011) for further discussion. We know that {L} overlays are specified for L tone since the word carrying the overlay is realized as a stretch of level L rather than displaying the interpolation characteristic of underspecification.
Again, domains could be defined in terms of the semantic scope of reference restricters rather than syntactic structure. Assuming that semantics is compositional, these arguments are equivalent. We present a syntactic analysis in this paper for the sake of concreteness.
Tommo So has an optional suffix -go on numerals that we gloss here as an adverbial suffix, since it is found in pairs like ‘big’ vs. ‘a lot’. Consultants report no difference in meaning when it is added to a numeral.
The placement of adjectives and numerals in functional projections (ModP and #P, respectively), rather than adjoining them to the NP or placing them on the spine is meant to capture their potentially phrasal nature (“very skinny”, “only three”, etc.). This move is not crucial, and the same results would hold in a model with spinal AdjP and NumP.
A reviewer asks whether any purely syntactic arguments support the proposed structural positions. The most common syntactic argument stems from word order; unfortunately, the DP structure of Dogon languages is such that no differences can be found: possessors are the only modifiers to precede the noun, so both are noun-adjacent. Given the consistent parallel between syntactic structure and domains of tonal overlays across the languages, we take the domains of tone control in the case of possessors to be strong evidence for the positions proposed.
For further evidence of this structural account, we might look to cases of coordination, for example [[N and N] Adj] or [[[N] Adj and Adj] Dem], to see if a controller is capable of imposing its overlay on all words in a c-commanded constituent. Unfortunately, Dogon languages avoid these structures, coordinating DPs rather than NPs (e.g. ‘[N Adj] and [N Adj]’) and stacking rather than coordinating adjectives. To pursue this issue, it will be necessary to consider relative clauses with conjoined subject NPs that cannot be separated, as in ‘the men and women who quarreled’, but this would take us too far afield to consider here.
Here, it is clear why binary branching is crucial: if modifiers like adjectives and numerals were sisters to the noun and ternary branching were allowed, then the adjective would symmetrically c-command the noun, but also symmetrically c-command the numeral, yet a following numeral is never subject to adjectival tone overlays in any Dogon language.
In all likelihood, this syntactic position (DP in the specifier of PossP) is always associated with tone control and the alienable pronominal possessor falls in a different projection like an appositive phrase (AppP). We do not explore the syntax of alienable pronominal possessors further here.
The Jamsay example in (17b) contains an idiosyncratic segmental change on the possessed noun, with final /e/ changing to [u] when possessed. A construction-based account, along the lines of that proposed in McPherson (2014), is able to handle cases of lexical idiosyncrasies by using sub-schemas that specify a particular lexical item instead of a syntactic category like N. Note that in Tommo So refers to a paternal uncle (younger than the father), while and refer to a maternal uncle (cf. Tommo So cognate ).
While we analyze the overlays as tonal morphemes, with the phenomenon under the heading of morphology, the analysis does not hinge crucially on these definitions. An alternative approach would be to treat the overlays as only tones whose distribution is determined by syntactic information, i.e. tonosyntax proper. This is a larger debate about how to characterize phrasal phonological alternations with little perceived meaning that goes beyond the scope of this paper.
An alternative analysis, following Heath and McPherson (2013), would be to propose a unifying feature [RR] for “reference restriction”. Different syntactic categories would trigger different allomorphs of this feature ({L} from an adjective, {H} from a pronominal possessor, etc.). Such a morphosemantic feature has not, to our knowledge, been proposed in the literature, but Dogon could give evidence for it. The problem with using a single feature like [RR] is that there would be no competitions; while different controllers may impose different allomorphs of the [RR] morpheme, any allomorph would satisfy the need to realize the morpheme. This is not what we find.
Importantly, the same is true even if a controller has taken its own overlay in a process we call “self-control”; see Sect. 6.2 for discussion.
Additionally, the grammar would contain a c-command constraint for a relative clause, XL Rel, but in the interest of space, we do not consider such forms in this paper.
It may be that these constraints can be decomposed into a constraint defining the domain of application and another phonological constraint like Align determining how the tonal morpheme is mapped to TBUs. As the issue of mapping is somewhat orthogonal to our main point (application of and competition between overlays), we do not address it further here.
Thank you to Byron Ahn for bringing this syntactic vs. phonological distinction to our attention.
Following the usual conventions, {L} superscripted on the left is the instantiation of [+Poss], while {L} superscripted on the right is the instantiation of [+Mod].
Possession here is inalienable, but the same bracketing holds of alienable possessors, which are also c-commanded by the demonstrative. If the competing controller is an adjective, however, then this configuration only applies to an inalienable possessor, i.e. [[PossI N] Adj] but [PossA [N Adj]].
Ben Tey has very complicated rules of tonal allomorphy for the possessive overlay, relying on details of both syntactic structure of the possessor and on its final tone. For the sake of simplicity, we demonstrate just one case, where the overlay is {HL}. For description of the other allomorphs, see Heath and McPherson (2013: exs. 13–16).
The possibility for the animate singular suffix on the noun is left out for the sake of illustration.
In these examples, it is clear that a {HL} overlay is realized across a stretch of words rather than iteratively on each word.
The adjacency requirement must be applied to domains and not individual words, since in a multi-word domain such as Poss T{N Adj}, the adjective is non-adjacent but the form is not penalized, because the overlay domain is adjacent to the possessor.
Surface linearity is sufficient for the data set explored here. Relative clauses may necessitate structural locality or a movement analysis rather than strict linear order.
Alternatively, we could posit a {L} overlay from the demonstrative on the already L-toned classifier , but this would mean that the demonstrative has controlled only part of the possessive DP, violating not only phase-based faithfulness but also the Phase Impenetrability Condition (Chomsky 2000), by which the spelled out material loses internal syntactic structure.
Only inalienable possessors can receive overlays. This is arguably due to Linearity, since nonpronominal alienable possessors are all followed by a possessive particle mà, making them non-adjacent. A counterexample to this is that Jamsay alienable pronominal possessors are not followed by mà, yet they too cannot receive overlays from other controllers, nor do they impose overlays themselves. 1sg alienable possessor má could possibly have resulted from fusion of an original H-toned pronominal morpheme with possessive ∗mà, in which case this combination would have been consistent with a Linearity-based explanation. However, the broader history of Dogon possessive pronominals is not yet clear, and we leave the behavior of Jamsay alienable possessors as an outstanding problem.
The tableaux for Yorno So contain one extra constraint, X L Num/Poss, which accounts for a data pattern in which a numeral gains the ability to impose {L} on c-commanded words when a possessor is present. This pattern is unique to Yorno So in the set of languages considered here, but the data pattern is mirrored in other Dogon languages. For maximum comparability, we use the entire proposed constraint set for each language even if one or more the constraints may be unnecessary for that particular language. Section 3 of the OTSoft output lists whether constraints are necessary or unnecessary in the grammar.
For a possible diachronic explanation for such “spreading” and “non-spreading” languages, see McPherson (2014).
Thank you to Abbie Hantgan for collecting this example, from the Kindige dialect of Najamba-Kindige.
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Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Bruce Hayes, Russell Schuh, Kie Zuraw, Larry Hyman, Anoop Mahajan, Laura Kalin, Byron Ahn, Hilda Koopman, and audiences at UCLA, UC Berkeley, ACAL 44, OCP 10, and AIMM 2 for helpful comments and feedback in the development of this topic. This paper has also benefited immensely from the thoughtful comments of the editor and three anonymous reviewers; any errors that remain are strictly our own. We gratefully acknowledge the funding of NSF grants BCS-0537435 (2006-09), BCS-0853364 (2009-13), and BCS-1263150 (2013-16) that made this research possible, as well as the Fulbright Foundation and the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (first author). Finally, we would like to thank our many Dogon consultants for sharing their languages with us.
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McPherson, L., Heath, J. Phrasal grammatical tone in the Dogon languages. Nat Lang Linguist Theory 34, 593–639 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11049-015-9309-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11049-015-9309-5