Aspects of Cinsenga Tonology |
Contents
Tone in Verbs 2 Negative and Imperative 66 | 3 |
Tone in Verbs 1 Declarative Indicative and Subjunctive | 22 |
The Effect of Object Markers on Verbal Tone | 99 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
adjectival forms Antepenultimate High Tone Bantu languages bisyllabic cikóndi ciNsenga citation form Completed Hodiernal Past Completed Non-hodiernal Past cried def L truncation Delete derived Docking Shift éka enclitics enumeratives énzé enze mw explained the story Falling Tone Class fótokoz H Docking High Tone Class Hodiernal Future infinitive forms insulted a child intransitive líil líl Low tone maize Meeussen's Rule Miti monosyllabic verbs mourned a child mulungu mûmbu múumbu mwáana mwâna s/he mwenze negative marker nkháani nkhâni nominal class Non-hodiernal Future non-relative Penultimate High Tone penultimate syllable possessive pronoun PVL Assign PVL def relative clause sm tm rad smi tmi sm2 subject marker subjunctive surface forms surface High tone táti TD def tense marker tense-aspects tm rad fv tonal Tone Assignment rule Tone Class Nouns Tone Doubling tone pattern Tone Shift rule transitive truncation SR túkwan underlying representations underlyingly verb verb stem vowel who've