Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

A Phonological Analysis of Nouns Borrowed by Fulfulde from Hausa

View through CrossRef
This study is an aspect of the phonological analysis of words borrowed by Fulfulde from Hausa. The main objective of this research is: to identify the phonological features of words borrowed from Hausa; This study employs a qualitative research method, the research respondents are selected from the students of Fulfulde Department, Federal College of Education, Yola. The analysis reveals that Fulfulde employs strategies in adopting Hausa loanwords: vowel lengthening, consonant and vowel deletion, and insertion. The study finds that: Hausa /z/ changes to [ʤ] and /ʃ/ to [s] following the absence of the corresponding Hausa sounds in the consonant inventory of the Fulfulde dialects under investigation. Similarly, because oral stops are prenasalised in Fulfulde, sounds such as /b/, /d/ and /ɡ/ become [mb], [nd], and [ɳɡ] respectively. The findings of the research have implications for the expansion and growth of the language as the research discusses phonological modifications which loanwords undergo to help the language develop its vocabulary.
Title: A Phonological Analysis of Nouns Borrowed by Fulfulde from Hausa
Description:
This study is an aspect of the phonological analysis of words borrowed by Fulfulde from Hausa.
The main objective of this research is: to identify the phonological features of words borrowed from Hausa; This study employs a qualitative research method, the research respondents are selected from the students of Fulfulde Department, Federal College of Education, Yola.
The analysis reveals that Fulfulde employs strategies in adopting Hausa loanwords: vowel lengthening, consonant and vowel deletion, and insertion.
The study finds that: Hausa /z/ changes to [ʤ] and /ʃ/ to [s] following the absence of the corresponding Hausa sounds in the consonant inventory of the Fulfulde dialects under investigation.
Similarly, because oral stops are prenasalised in Fulfulde, sounds such as /b/, /d/ and /ɡ/ become [mb], [nd], and [ɳɡ] respectively.
The findings of the research have implications for the expansion and growth of the language as the research discusses phonological modifications which loanwords undergo to help the language develop its vocabulary.

Related Results

Hausa
Hausa
With an estimated population of up to 50 million, Hausa make up one of the largest people groups practicing Islam. Despite settlement of today’s Hausaland in the central Sudan by t...
Hausa
Hausa
The term “Hausa” refers to a language spoken by over thirty million first-language speakers living mainly in the region now comprising northern Nigeria and southern Niger, with lar...
Agreement with collective nouns: Diachronic corpus studies of American and British English
Agreement with collective nouns: Diachronic corpus studies of American and British English
English collective nouns and their agreement patterns have been extensively studied in corpus linguistics. Previous research has highlighted variability within and across English v...
Morphophono-Logics of Interrogatives in Fulfulde Noun Classes
Morphophono-Logics of Interrogatives in Fulfulde Noun Classes
Fulfulde language is classified under African languages, as a family member of Niger-Congo, under West Atlantic group. It has some family members such as Wolof, Serer, and Joola. (...
Nazarin Tsarin Sauti a Wasu Zaurance Na Hausa
Nazarin Tsarin Sauti a Wasu Zaurance Na Hausa
Zaurance yana ɗaya daga cikin azancin da harshen Hausa ya yi fice da su wanda matasa musamman mata suke amfani da shi wajen sakaya zance ta hanyar sauya masa wasu fitattun kamannin...
Reflection of the Hausa Society in Hausa Tales
Reflection of the Hausa Society in Hausa Tales
Tales are to a certain extent the mirror of life, they reflect what people do, what they think, how they live and have lived, their values, their joys and their sorrows. The tales ...
Syllabification in Optimality Theory
Syllabification in Optimality Theory
This paper examined syllabification in the Sokoto dialect of Fulfulde within the framework of Optimality Theory. The theory employed constraint-based rather than rule-based notatio...
Features of some counting nouns in modern Russian and their national and cultural specificity
Features of some counting nouns in modern Russian and their national and cultural specificity
The article examines countable nouns (pyatak, dvushka, etc.), which refer to peripheral means of expressing quantity. In the semantics of such words, the meaning of plurality appea...

Back to Top