1 / 30

Nigerian English prosody

Overview. Description of Nigerian English prosody: speech rhythm, tone/intonation, stress/accentComparison with British English and with the Nigerian languages Yoruba, Igbo and HausaExplanation of differences. Nigerian English - English in Nigeria. at least 400 local languages (Niger-Congo, Afr

trinity
Download Presentation

Nigerian English prosody

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Nigerian English prosody Sociolinguistics: Varieties of English Class 8

    2. Overview Description of Nigerian English prosody: speech rhythm, tone/intonation, stress/accent Comparison with British English and with the Nigerian languages Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa Explanation of differences

    3. Nigerian English - English in Nigeria at least 400 local languages (Niger-Congo, Afro-Asiatic, Nilo-Saharan) English is a second language for nearly all Nigerians; medium of business, commerce, education, mass media varieties: from Pidgin English to approximation of Southern British Standard; correlated with education and native language - Standard Nigerian English? “Educated variety”, socially most accepted variety

    4. Prosody (suprasegmental phonology)

    5. Speech rhythm: old approach stress-timing and syllable-timing (Abercrombie 1967, Pike 1945) Winter is always cold in England La ca sa del la si gno ra é ver de.

    6. Speech rhythm: new approaches speech rhythm is multidimensional and correlated with phonological properties such as syllable structure vowel reduction vowel length distinction lexical stress (Dauer 1983)

    7. Syllable length: Rhythm Ratio (Gibbon & Gut 2001)

    8. Vocalic and consonantal intervals %V, delta C (Ramus et al. 1999)

    9. Tone and intonation Intonation languages: phonological pitch distinctions on domains larger than the word; intonational phrases, pitch accents, boundary tones; tunes have relatively consistent meaning where is he /going Tone languages: pitch is lexically and/or grammatically significant, contrastive and relative; associated with syllable ma

    10. Stress and accent languages with lexical stress (fixed or free) obJECT vs. OBject pitch accent languages languages without word stress

    11. Nigerian English speech rhythm “syllable-timed” rather than “stress-timed” (Udofot 1997) adjacent syllables have similar length less vowel reduction

    12. Nigerian English intonation more falling pitch movements fewer complex pitch movements (Jowitt 2000) high tone on stressed syllables (Wells 1982)

    13. Nigerian English prosody: stress Different word stress than in British English More accents in free speech (Udofot 1997)

    14. Research questions Is Nigerian English prosody different from British English prosody? Why? Is there an influence of the prosody of Nigerian languages? Does Nigerian English prosody show native language influence?

    15. Hausa Afro-Asiatic, Chadic five vowels with phonemic length contrast three syllable types: CV, CVV, CVC two tones: H, L accent on high tone

    16. Igbo Niger-Congo, Benue-Congo eight vowels, no length distinction syllable structures: V, N, CV two tones: H, L with grammatical function

    17. Yoruba Niger-Congo, Benue-Congo seven vowels with phonemic length contrast syllable structures: V, N, CV three tones: H, M, L

    18. Prosodic Characteristics of Nigerian English British English complex syllable structure intonation stress vowel reduction Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba simple syllable structure tone no stress system, except for Hausa no vowel reduction

    19. The Study 12 speakers of Nigerian English, reading and retelling a story 6 speakers of Nigerian English reading a word list and sentences 3 speakers of Southern British Standard English reading and retelling the story 3 speakers each of Hausa, Igbo and Yoruba, reading and re-telling a story

    20. Analysis

    21. Analysis 1) Transcription of syllables 2) Subsequent syllable durations 3) vocalic and consonantal intervals 4) Intonation 5) Accents in story 6) Word accents in word list and sentences

    22. Subsequent syllable length

    23. Speech rhythm

    25. 4) Intonation Transcription of pitch height/movement on each syllable H (high) L (low) M (mid) HL (falling) LH (rising)

    26. Intonation 96% of all syllables with level tone 86% of all pitch movements in pre-pausal position High tone on content words (noun, verb, adjective, adverb), beginning on stressed syllable H H H H L H L H H tiger walking remove continued

    27. Sentence intonation Spreading high tone on content words Contour tone at the end of the utterance L H H L L H L H H L L HL A tiger and a mouse were walking in a field

    28. 5) Sentence Accents Accent placement in the story readings 4 raters; agreement 76% accent if agreement at least 3 out of 4

    29. Accents

    30. Word accents inTRESting emiGRAting interPREted

    31. Summary Syllable structure in NigEng simpler than in BrEng; greater prevalence of CV syllables Speech rhythm: less vowel reduction, more durationally similar syllables More accents; phrase-final stress Spreading high tone on stressed syllable = pitch accent language?

More Related