
This book examines the tone and accent of Oklahoma Cherokee, in which six possible pitch patterns can occur on a syllable: low, high, low-high, high-low, lowfall, and superhigh. It provides a comprehensive description and analysis of these patterns, examining their distribution, their source, the principles that determine their positions, and the nature of tonal alternations. The tone and accent of Oklahoma Cherokee displays some typologically unusual features, such as the glottal stop as the historical source for both high and lowfall tones, the coexistence of tonal and accentual systems, the existence of multiple accentual systems, and the morphosyntactic use of accents. Studies on tones in general have focused mainly on analytical languages or languages with little morphology, but Cherokee is unique in that it is polysynthetic at the same time as tonal. The emergence of tones in Oklahoma Cherokee is recent and its source is easily traceable, but the language has already developed a complex tonal alignment and tonal phonology. Hiroto Uchihara's description of tone and accent in Oklahoma Cherokee will not only contribute to a deeper understanding of the sound system of Cherokee, but will also advance the historical study of Iroquoian languages as a whole, and the typological study of tonal and accentual systems more generally.
This book investigates the complex tonal and accentual phonology of the Oklahoma Cherokee language, specifically addressing how a polysynthetic language develops and maintains a sophisticated pitch system. Hiroto Uchihara, a specialist in Iroquoian linguistics, utilizes primary field data and comparative analysis to document the six distinct pitch patterns found in the language. The work argues that Cherokee serves as a critical case study for understanding the intersection of polysynthetic morphology and tonal development, challenging existing linguistic models that primarily focus on analytical languages.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Linguists and scholars of Iroquoian languages identify this work as a significant contribution to the typological study of tonal systems. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which is intended for an audience with a strong background in phonological theory.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191059846
ISBN-13:
9780191059841
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