Mushere A Chadic Language of Five Level Tones
Mushere A Chadic Language of Five Level Tones
Mushere A Chadic Language of Five Level Tones
Summary : Chadic languages which form the most southwestern family of the Hamitosemitic /
Afroasiatic phylum are spread over northern Nigeria , Cameroon and the central Chad Republic .
Mushere , one of them , displays the typical binary verbal aspect system which , however , is here
no longer marked by ablaut ( apophony ) — as for example in Akkadian -prus versus -parras — but
by ' abton ' ( ' apotony ' ) , i . e . by an opposition of tone levels . Morphophonological needs may have
led Mushere to develop two more levels ( half - low and half - high ) in addition to the three basic
ones ( high , mid and low ) , which brings the total number to five ; a tonological situation which is
probably unique among the approximately 150 languages of the Chadic family .
language Mubi still reflects this stage best . Compare the following forms of
Singular Plural
Verbal noun (E - E ) (A - A )
fèlègé fàlàgé
Perfective (E - I )
fílík (I — I ) félík
Imperfective fíléek
(I - EE ) fíláak
(I - AA )
consists of a subject pronoun and a verbal stem . The subject pronouns are the
same for perfective and imperfective ; moreover , there are no TAM morphemes
* The authors would like to thank Sonja Bräscher , M . A ., for her untiring assistance
in the technical editing of this article .
298 Herrmann Jungraithmayr and Philibus Diyakal
The perfective aspect is used for all accomplished events or actions ( past
tense ) , the imperfective for any non - accomplished events or actions ( present
In the course of the past 4000 - 5000 years Chadic languages have under¬
kan sâyâs " I usually sell " . With the decrease of internal apophonic flexibil¬
ity the relevance of suprasegmental features , especially that of tone , has in¬
features in lexicon and grammar . So far , a final stage of this development has
been reached in languages where there are no longer any — or only few — seg¬
mental , neither internal nor external , features at work . Here nominal plurals
have stopped to occur , any verbal grammatical forms are achieved solely by
ties . This necessity led to an increase of tone levels , first from two to three ,
but ultimately to four , even to five . Some of the members of the so - called
of the Nigerian Plateau , have reached this extreme stage of linguistic evolu¬
tion . Mushere is one of them .
means of making their binary aspect systems is best illustrated by the an¬
Perfective Imperfective
Mubi mat muwdat
Mushere
múut ( high ) mkut ( low )
Cf . also the reflexes of the PC root * sw ( y ) " to drink " (= Hausa sháa ) where
served a more conservative shape than the highly conservative Mubi language :
Perfective Imperfective
Mubi six sûwâa
aspect system .
All verbal conjugations are based on the opposition of two tonally marked
aspect stems , i . e . perfective and imperfective . The first one serves to form
the past tense and the subjunctive mood , the latter to form the present , pro¬
gressive and future tenses . The " strong " verb classes are characterized by
the actual presence of a tonal opposition , the " weak " ones by its absence , i. e .
Based on the binary opposition of the verbal aspect stems , the following
In addition to the three basic tone levels mentioned above ( low , mid , high )
tone level , i . e . half - low , placed between mid and low is of phonological re¬
it will be marked by a low tone mark preceding an unmarked mid tone syl¬
lable , e . g . vtim " sheep ". A cause which may have triggered this tone level is
300 Herrmann Jungraithmayr and Philibus Diyakal
Nouns displaying the haL tone level include a disproportionally high num¬
ber of animal and plant names a selection of which is presented hereafter .
Animal names :
Plant names :
haL M or H
vseen length seen life
Kseer root seer to narrate
Kkum mask kúm corpse
Kcfang monitor cfdng 1)to beg ; 2) then
Ktul home tul bracelet
Mushere , a Chadic Language of Five Level Tones 301
It is difficult to identify a cause for this fourth level tone in Mushere . One
possibility could be the loss of a prefix , probably a nasal , the low tone of
which — as a floating tone — would have had — after having disappeared — the
effect of lowering the mid tone of the actual nominal stem . Thus , e . g . vshit
" grass " would have originated from * hshit . It is noteworthy that in Ngam ,
the southernmost Bole - Tangale language , nouns denoting animals and ob¬
recent study : " Es fällt auf , dass eine grosse Zahl primärer Nomina , die Tiere
und Dinge aus der Natur beschreiben , auf einen pränasalierten Konsonaten
anlauten . " 1 Also in Goemai " prenasalisation is found with many nouns de¬
2 . 3 . 2 Terms of relationship
Some terms of relationship display the half - low intermediate tone level
( haL ) in certain positions . " Father " and " mother " are the most prominent
The absolute pronouns display the half - low tone level in the 1 st and 2 nd per¬
Sg - PL
lc van lc mun
2m Knga 2c ngun
2f Knji
3c ni 3c mo 'p
1 Andreas 2012 , p . 63 .
2 Hellwig 2011 , p . 31 . Compare also Frajzyngier / Koops 1989 , Miehe 1991 as well
as Wolff / Gerhardt 1977 .
302 Herrmann Jungraithmayr and Philibus Diyakal
Object pronouns
direct indirect
lc ân an
2m kâ nga
Sg -
2f yí njî
3c ni yini
lc mún mun
PL 2c kún ngun
3c móp mo 'p
Segmentally , it is obvious that the direct forms are basic and the indirect
ones derived ; e . g . yini is literally " to him " . The plural forms of the indirect
pronoun display a mid - high tonal pattern opposed to the high tone of the
direct pronouns . Their usage is illustrated by the following examples :
a ñas kún I have beaten you ( pl . ) api nga I have given you ( m .)
If the object pronouns are preceded by a preposition , such as yl " to " , " for "
or kú " with " , the indirect set is applied . Thus , yl an is " for or to me " . If the
preposition carries a high tone , however , the low tone of the pronoun is
raised to half - low . Thus , we have the following forms :
kú ' an ( = an ) with me
kú ' nga ( = nga ) with you ( m .)
kú 'nji ( = Knji ) with you ( f .)
kú ni with him / her
The plural forms , however , display the direct object - high tone , viz . kú mún
with us " , kú ngún " with you " ( pl .) > kú móp " with them " .
"
303
Mushere , a Chadic Language of Five Level Tones
It is also attested that the high tone of the direct object pronouns is
changed to mid - high when they are preceded by a verb form with a high -
you ( f .)
yï ^
mun US
kun
you ( pi .)
mo 'p them
There are two sets of possessive pronominal morphemes , one indicating in¬
alienable , the other alienable property or possession ; the former being suf¬
fixed , the latter being put separately after . The two sets are as follows :
lc - nâ vmaan
Ex : kâa - nâ my head Ex : lú ^maan my house
2m - kâ vmak
2f vmik
Sg - - yí
3m - nî mini
3f - tâ mini
lc - mú vmun
PL 2c - kú vmuk
3c
- móp mkmop
Note : Whereas the suffixes display a high tone , the postpositions of the first
and second persons singular and plural are marked by the half - low tone level .
As to the " logic " of ( in ) alienability it is understood that body parts are
riin " shade / shadow " and sim " name " are also treated as inalienable ; e . g . sim -
3 The tone of the absolute pronouns in the 1 st and 2 nd Sg . persons varies according to
their morphosyntactic usage .
304 Herrmann Jungraithmayr and Philibus Diyakal
Personal pronouns
2 . 3 . 7 Interrogative pronouns
The following interrogative pronouns are marked by the half - low level tone :
Mid - tone nouns are down - stepped to half - low in nomen regens position .
yit eye :
vyit - lwaân shyness
vyit - mwaa tears
vyit - ^ ngurum in the public ( lit . " eyes of people " )
vyit - ^shak opposite each other
vyit - ^ngokol deep eye - hole
poo mouth :
vpoo - tukup heart , mind
vpoo -pût slip of tongue
"poo - lú entrance , door
vpoo - hit early morning
Mu s hcrc , a Chadic Language of Five Level Tones 305
run shade :
xrim sekep shade of tree
shaar friend :
xshaar Nmwaan co - traveller
Apart from the cases where the half - low tone level can be shown to be the
had a segmental low - tone prefix h - at the outset but which they lost in the
course of their evolution ; its ( low ) tone , however , survived and exerted its
another intermediate tone level between high and mid , i . e . half - high ( haH ).
Thus , the language makes use of the complete musical scale comprising all
five notes between DO and SOL . At this stage of research , only a few ex¬
amples are available which attest the grammatical function of this fifth tone
level as the main marker of a locative case with high tone nouns .
The fact that tone lowering occurs as a locative case marking feature has al¬
however , the lowered high tone is not half - high but simply low .
306 Herrmann Jungraithmayr and Philibus Diyakal
3 . Conclusion
the Hamitosemitic / Afroasiatic phylum . Among the few features which still
Moreover , the concept of a binary aspect system has also been preserved ,
though the means by which it is realized have changed : the original ( vowel )
ity which dominates the lexicon and grammar of the languages concerned .
Thus , Mushere has reached the extreme peak by installing not only three
tone levels for its basic system , but by adding two more levels , i . e . one be¬
tween mid and low , the other between mid and high . So far , Mushere seems
Abbreviations
C consonant Pi plural
c communis Progr . progressive
haL half - low tone Sg singular
H high tone sp species
L low tone TAM tense - aspect - mood
m masculine v vowel
M mid tone VC verb class
PC Proto - Chadic VS verbal system
Tone levels
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