This project undertakes a comparative study of the mutual influence of phonetics, phonology, syntax and information structure on the phrasal prosody of selected Bantu languages. The project investigates the syntax and prosody of complex syntactic structures - embedded clauses, dislocations and questions - to test whether prosodic models developed for simple structures extend to more complex data. Careful phonetic analysis of the data is being undertaken in order to provide a more detailed description of systematic correlates of phrasal prosody, allowing each prosodic level to be better motivated. As we are analyzing the data in current syntactic models, the project also aims to provide a more fine-grained picture of the syntactic factors that condition prosody and determine whether non-syntactic factors influence phrasal prosody. Investigating the same structures in several Bantu languages, spoken over a geographically wide area, will provide the basis for a comparative study of the syntax and prosody of these structures that will be of interest both to Bantuists and to other researchers working on similar issues.
The following research questions are central to this proposal:
Gérard Philippson
INALCO, Paris
Bantu tonology
Sophie Manus
Université Lyon 2
Makonde tonology
Martial Embanga
Université Paris 3
Mbosi tonology
Cédric Patin
Université de Lille
Shingazidja phonology-syntax interface
Manfred Krifka
Director, ZAS, Berlin
Bantu semantics
Hubert Truckenbrodt
ZAS, Berlin
Phonology-syntax interface
Tonjes Veenstra
ZAS, Berlin
Bantu syntax
Sabine Zerbian
Uni Potsdam
South African Bantu tone and intonation
Charles W. Kisseberth
Tel Aviv University (emeritus)
Bantu phonology-syntax
Larry Hyman
UC-Berkeley
Bantu phonology-syntax