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Dagbani language

Dagbani (or Dagbane), also known as Dagbanli or Dagbanle, is a Gur language spoken in Ghana and Northern Togo. Its native speakers are estimated around 1,170,000.[1] Dagbani is the most widely spoken language in northern Ghana, specifically among the tribes that fall under the authority of the King of Dagbon, known as the Yaa-Naa. Dagbon is a traditional kingdom situated in northern Ghana, and the Yaa-Naa is the paramount chief or king who governs over the various tribes and communities within the Dagbon kingdom.

Dagbani
Dagbanli
Native toGhana, Togo
RegionKingdom of Dagbon
Ethnicity5.6 million Dagbamba (2021 census)[1]
Native speakers
1.2 million (2013)[1]
Dialects
  • Nanuni (Nanumba)
  • Tomosili
  • Nayahali
Latin, Ajami (Arabic)
Language codes
ISO 639-3dag
Glottologdagb1246
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
PersonDagbambia[2]
LanguageDagbanli
CountryDagbɔŋ

Dagbani is closely related to and mutually intelligible with Mampruli, Nabit, Talni, Kamara, Kantosi, and Hanga, also spoken in Northern, North East, Upper East, and Savannah Regions. It is also similar to the other members of the same subgroup spoken in other regions, including Dagaare and Wali, spoken in Upper West Region of Ghana, along with Frafra and Kusaal, spoken in the Upper East Region of the country.[3][4]

In Togo, Dagbani is spoken in the Savanes Region on the border with Ghana.

Dialects edit

Dagbani has a major dialect split between Eastern Dagbani (Nayahali), centred on the traditional capital town of Yendi (Naya), and Western Dagbani (Tomosili), centred on the administrative capital of the Northern Region, Tamale. The dialects are, however, mutually intelligible, and mainly consist of different root vowels in some lexemes, and different forms or pronunciations of some nouns, particularly those referring to local flora. The words Dagbani and Dagbanli given above for the name of the language are respectively the Eastern and Western dialect forms of the name, but the Dagbani Orthography Committee resolved that “It was decided that in the spelling system <Dagbani> is used to refer to the ... Language, and <Dagbanli> ... to the life and culture”;[5][original research?] in the spoken language, each dialect uses its form of the name for both functions.

Phonology edit

Vowels edit

Dagbani has eleven phonemic vowels – six short vowels and five long vowels:

Olawsky (1999) puts the schwa (ə) in place of /ɨ/, unlike other researchers on the language[6] who use the higher articulated /ɨ/. Allophonic variation based on tongue-root advancement is well attested for 4 of these vowels: [i] ~ [ɪ]/[ə], [e] ~ [ɛ], [u] ~ [ʊ] and [o] ~ [ɔ].

Consonants edit

  • [x] mainly occurs phonemically among other Western dialects.
  • /s/ debuccalizes as a glottal [h] when in intervocalic position. /ɡ/ debuccalizes as a glottal stop [ʔ] post-vocalic position.
  • Sounds /k, ɡ, s, z/ are realized as [t͡ʃ, d͡ʒ, ʃ, ʒ] when preceding front vowels.
  • /d/ can be heard as [ɾ] when in post-vocalic positions.[6]

Tone edit

Dagbani is a tonal language in which pitch is used to distinguish words, as in gballi [ɡbálːɪ́] (high-high) 'grave' vs. gballi [ɡbálːɪ̀] (high-low) 'zana mat'.[7] The tone system of Dagbani is characterised by two level tones and downstep (a lowering effect occurring between sequences of the same phonemic tone).

Orthography edit

 
A teacher at School for Life, a project in northern Ghana

Dagbani is written in a Latin alphabet with the addition of the apostrophe, the letters ɛ, ɣ, ŋ, ɔ, and ʒ, and the digraphs ch, gb, kp, ŋm, sh and ny. The literacy rate used to be only 2–3%.[8][9] This percentage is expected to rise as Dagbani is now a compulsory subject in primary and junior secondary school all over Dagbon. The orthography currently used[10] (Orthography Committee /d(1998)) represents a number of allophonic distinctions. Tone is not marked.

a b ch d e ɛ f g gb ɣ h i j k kp l m n ny ŋ ŋm o ɔ p r s sh t u w y z ʒ

Grammar edit

Dagbani is agglutinative, but with some fusion of affixes. The constituent order in Dagbani sentences is usually agent–verb–object.

Lexicon edit

There is insight into a historical stage of the language in the papers of Rudolf Fisch, reflecting data collected during his missionary work in the German Togoland colony in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, especially the lexical list,[11] though there is also some grammatical information[12] and sample texts.[13] A more modern glossary was published in 1934 by a southern Ghanaian officer of the colonial government, E. Foster Tamakloe, in 1934,[14] with a revised edition by British officer Harold Blair.[15] Various editors added to the wordlist and a more complete publication was produced in 2003 by a Dagomba scholar, Ibrahim Mahama.[16] According to the linguist Salifu Nantogma Alhassan,[17] there is evidence to suggest that there are gender-related double standards in the Dagbani language with "more labels that trivialise females than males".[18] Meanwhile, the data was electronically compiled by John Miller Chernoff and Roger Blench (whose version is published online),[19] and converted into a database by Tony Naden, on the basis of which a full-featured dictionary is ongoing and can be viewed online.[20]

Noun Class System edit

Noun Class[21] Example (SG) Example (PL) SG Suffix PL Suffix Gloss
1 tIb-li tIb-a -li -a ear
2 paG-a paG-ba -a -ba woman
3 gab-ga gab-si -ga -si rope
4 wab-gu wab-ri -gu -ri elephant
5 kur-gu kur-a -gu -a old
6 ko-m/kom- ko-ma/kom-a -m/ -ma/-a water

Pronouns edit

Each set of personal pronouns in Dagbani is distinguished regarding person, number and animacy. Besides the distinction between singular and plural, there is an additional distinction between [+/- animate] in the 3rd person. Moreover, Dagbani distinguishes between emphatic and non-emphatic pronouns and there are no gender distinctions. While there is no morphological differentiation between grammatical cases, pronouns can occur in different forms according to whether they appear pre- or postverbally.[22]

Non-emphatic Pronouns edit

Preverbal edit

Preverbal pronouns serve as subjects of a verb and are all monosyllabic.[22]

Person SG PL
1 n ti
2 a yi
3 [+animate] o
3 [-animate] di di, ŋa
Postverbal edit

Postverbal pronouns usually denote objects.[22]

Person SG PL
1 ma ti
2 a ya
3 [+animate] o ba
3 [-animate] li li, ŋa

Given the fact that preverbal and postverbal pronouns do not denote two complementary sets, one could refer to them as unmarked or specifically marked for postverbal occurrence.[22]

Person SG PL
Unmarked Marked Unmarked Marked
1 n ma ti
2 a yi ya
3 [+animate] o ba
3 [-animate] di li di (ŋa) li

Emphatic Pronouns edit

Emphatic pronouns in Dagbani serve as regular pronouns in that they can stand in isolation, preverbally or postverbally.[22]

Person SG PL
1 mani tinima
2 nyini yinima
3 [+animate] ŋuni, ŋuna bɛna, bana
3 [-animate] dini, dina ŋana

Reciprocal Pronouns edit

Reciprocals are formed by the addition of the word taba after the verb.[22]

Ti

1PL

ŋmaai

cut

taba.

each-other

Ti ŋmaai taba.

1PL cut each-other

„We cut each other.“[22]

Reflexive Pronouns edit

Reflexive pronouns are formed by the suffix -maŋa, which is attached to the non-emphatic preverbal pronoun.[22]

O

3SG

ŋmaagi

cut

o-maŋa.

3SG-REFL

O ŋmaagi o-maŋa.

3SG cut 3SG-REFL

„He cuts himself.“[22]

The affix maŋa can also occur as an emphatic pronoun after nouns.[22]

O

3SG

zo

friend

maŋa.

REFL

O zo maŋa.

3SG friend REFL

„His friend himself.“[22]

Possessive Pronouns edit

The possessive pronouns in Dagbani exactly correspond to the preverbal non-emphatic pronouns, which always proceed the possessed constituent.

O

3SG

yili.

house

O yili.

3SG house

„His house.“[22]

Relative Pronouns edit

In Dagbani the relative pronouns are ŋʊn ("who") and ni ("which").[23]

Bi-so

child

ŋʊn

REL

zu

steal.PFV

baa

dog

la

DET

tʃaŋ-ja.

go-PFV

Bi-so ŋʊn zu baa la tʃaŋ-ja.

child REL steal.PFV dog DET go-PFV

„The child who stole the dog is gone.“[23]

Ti

3PL

ɲa

see.PFV

bi-so

child

ŋʊn

REL

zu

steal.PFV

baa

dog

la.

DET

Ti ɲa bi-so ŋʊn zu baa la.

3PL see.PFV child REL steal.PFV dog DET

„We saw the child who stole the dog.“[23]

The relative pronouns in Dagbani are not obligatory present and can also be absent depending on the context, as the following example illustrates.[23]

Azima

Azima

kaagi

visit.PFV

ji-li

house

ʃɛli

pro

ni

REL

da

buy.PFV

la.

DET

Azima kaagi ji-li ʃɛli ni da la.

Azima visit.PFV house pro REL buy.PFV DET

„Azima visited the house which I bought.“[23]

Azima

Azima

kaagi

visit.PFV

ji-li

house

la.

DET

Azima kaagi ji-li la.

Azima visit.PFV house DET

„Azima visited the house which I bought.“[23]

Relative pronouns in Dagbani can also be complex in its nature, such that they consist of two elements, an indefinite pronoun and an emphatic pronoun.[22]

Bi-a

child

so

pro

ŋʊn

REL

zu

steal.PFV

baa

dog

la

DET

tʃaŋ-ja.

go.PFV

Bi-a so ŋʊn zu baa la tʃaŋ-ja.

child pro REL steal.PFV dog DET go.PFV

„The child who stole the dog is gone.“[23]

Su-a

Knife

ʃɛli

pro

din

REL

pa

be

teebʊlʊ

table.SG

zʊʔʊ

head

maa

DET

kabiya.

break.PFV

Su-a ʃɛli din pa teebʊlʊ zʊʔʊ maa kabiya.

Knife pro REL be table.SG head DET break.PFV

„The knife which was on the table is broken.“[23]

Interrogative Pronouns edit

Source:[24]

Interrogative pronouns in Dagbani make a distinction between human and non-human.

Dagbani English
bòn / bà what
ŋùní who
bòzùɤù why
where
díní which
álá how much
bòndàlì when
sáhá díní when
wùlà how

Additionally, interrogative pronouns inflect for number, but not all of them. Those inflecting for number belong to the semantic categories [ +THING], [ +SELECTION], [ +PERSON].[25]

Semantic Category SG PL Gloss
[+PERSON] ŋùní bànímà who/whom
[+SELECTION] dìní dìnnímà which
[+THING] bònímà what

Demonstrative Pronouns edit

Demonstrative pronouns in Dagbani make a morphological difference between the singular and plural form. The demonstrative pronoun ŋɔ moves to the specifier of the functional NumP and if Num is plural, then the plural morphem -nímá attaches to the demonstrative pronoun. If Num is singular, there is a zero morphem, such that the demonstrative pronoun does not differ in its morphological form.[26]

Demonstrative Pronoun SG PL Gloss
Proximal ŋɔ ŋɔnímá this/these
Distal ŋɔ há ŋɔnímá há that/those

Indefinite Pronouns edit

Dagbani distinguishes not only between singular and plural for indefinite pronouns, but also between [+/-animate]. Therefore, there are two pairs of indefinite pronouns. Indefinites are basically used in the same way as adjectives, as their morphological form is similar to that of nouns and adjectives.[22] In order to express an indefinite like "something" the inanimate singular form is combined with the noun bini ("thing").

SG PL Gloss
[+animate] <so> <shɛba> somebody
[-animate] <shɛli> <shɛŋa> something

Syntax edit

Word Order edit

Dagbani has a rigid SVO word order. In the canonical sentence structure, the verb precedes the direct and indirect object as well as adverbials. The clause structure exhibits varying functional elements projecting various functional phrasal categories including tense, aspect, negation, mood and the conjoint/disjoint paradigm.

Dawuni

Dawuni

kú-r-í

kill-IPFV-CONJ

sòònsí

rabbits

máá.

DEF

Dawuni kú-r-í sòònsí máá.

Dawuni kill-IPFV-CONJ rabbits DEF

„Dawuni kills the rabbits.[25]

Páɣà

woman

máá

DET

give.PFV

bíhí

children

nyùlí

yam

zùŋò.

today

Páɣà máá tí bíhí nyùlí zùŋò.

woman DET give.PFV children yam today

„The woman has given the children yam today.[25]

Verb Phrase edit

The VP in Dagbani consists of a preverbal particle encoding tense, aspect and mood, the main verb, and a postverbal particle which marks focus.[27]

Preverbal Particles edit

Major Particles edit
Tense, Aspect, Modal Particles[28] Dagbani
today (also once upon a time)
one day away sa
two or more days away daa
habitual yi
still, not yet na
actually siri
once again, as usual yaa
suddenly, just dii
non-future negative
future affix
future negative ku
imperative subjunctive negative de
again lah

Main Verb edit

Each verb in Dagbani has two forms, a perfective and an imperfective form with very few exceptions. In general, the perfective form is the unmarked form, whereas the imperfective form corresponds to the progressive form, or in other words it refers to an action, which is still in progress.[22] The perfective is nearly syncretic with the infinitive, which in turn has an /n-/-prefix. The imperfective is formed by the suffix /-di/.[22]

The inflectional system in Dagbani is relatively poor as compared to other languages. There is no grammatical agreement, since number and person are not marked. Tense is marked only under certain constraints. Basically, Dagbani makes a distinction between future and non-future, however the main distinction does not concern Tense, but Aspect and occurs between perfective and imperfective.

Postverbal Particles edit

The postverbal particle la marks presentational focus, rather than contrastive focus.[27] In comparison to the postverbal particle in Dagaare, the function of this Dagbani particle is also not yet fully investigated. There are native speakers, who consider the particle to indicate that what is expressed to the hearer is not shared knowledge. Issah (2013) on the other hand argues that the presence of la asserts new information, while its absence indicates old information.

Napari

Napari

da-Ø

buy.PFV

la

FOC

loori.

lorry

Napari da-Ø la loori.

Napari buy.PFV FOC lorry

„Napari has bought a lorry.“[27]

Napari

Napari

da-Ø

buy.PFV

loori.

lorry

Napari da-Ø loori.

Napari buy.PFV lorry

„Napari has bought a lorry.“[27]

Conjoint / Disjoint Markers edit

[29] Conjoint Disjoint
Imperfective

Ò

3SG

nyú-r-í

drink-IPFV-CONJ

kóm.

water

Ò nyú-r-í kóm.

3SG drink-IPFV-CONJ water

„He is drinking water.“

Ò

3SG

nyú-r-á.

drink-IPFV-CONJ

Ò nyú-r-á.

3SG drink-IPFV-CONJ

„He is drinking.“

Perfective

Ò

3SG

nyú-Ø

drink.PFV-CONJ

kóm.

water

Ò nyú-Ø kóm.

3SG drink.PFV-CONJ water

„He drank water.“

Ò

3SG

nyú-yá.

drink.PFV-CONJ

Ò nyú-yá.

3SG drink.PFV-CONJ

„He drank.“

Questions edit

In Dagbani, the question word can either appear in situ or ex situ.[29]

Ex situ edit

Dagbani Question words
what
Dini which
Ya where
Wula how
ŋuni who
ŋun whose
Bɔ zuɤu why

The basic word order in Dagbani questions is SVO, such that the question word is fronted and followed by the focus marker ka. This is the unmarked form and accepted by many native speakers as "natural".[22]

Ya

where

ka

FOC

a

2SG

chana?

go.IPFV

Ya ka a chana?

where FOC 2SG go.IPFV

„Where did you go to?“[22]

what

ka

FOC

a

2SG

bɔra?

want.IPFV

Bɔ ka a bɔra?

what FOC 2SG want.IPFV

„What did you want?“[22]

In situ edit

Yes-/No-question in Dagbani are formed by the disjunction bee ('or'), which either conjoints two propositions or which occurs sentence-finally to indicate that the sentence with SVO order is actually a question.

A

2SG

ni

FUT

kana

come

bee

or

a

2SG

ku

NEG.FUT

kana?

come

A ni kana bee a ku kana?

2SG FUT come or 2SG NEG.FUT come

„Will you come or will you not come?“[22]

A

2SG

ni

FUT

kana

come

bee?

or

A ni kana bee?

2SG FUT come or

„Will you come or not?“[22]

In addition to Yes-/No-questions, the question word can also occur in sentence-final position. This might correspond to echo questions.[30]

Napari

Napari

buy.PFV

bò?

what

Napari dá bò?

Napari buy.PFV what

„Napari bought what?“[30]

Napari

Napari

buy.PFV

búá.

goat

Napari dá búá.

Napari buy.PFV goat

„Napari bought a goat.“[30]

Dagbani language scholars edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Dagbani at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)  
  2. ^ Naden, Tony (2014). Dagbani dictionary. Webonary.
  3. ^ Naden, Tony (1989). Gur. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. pp. 141–168.
  4. ^ Bendor-Samuel, John T. (1989). The Niger-Congo Languages. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.
  5. ^ Committee, Dagbani Orthography (1998). Approved Dagbani Orthography. n/p (Tamale, N.R.): privately.
  6. ^ a b Hudu, Fusheini (2010). Dagbani tongue-root harmony: a formal account with ultrasound investigation. Vancouver: University of British Columbia.
  7. ^ Olawsky 1997
  8. ^ Denteh, A. C. (Andrew Crakye) (1974). Spoken Dagbani for non-Dagbani beginners. Pointer. OCLC 4602509.
  9. ^ Olawsky, Knut J. (2003-01-02), "What is a word in Dagbani?", Word, Cambridge University Press, pp. 205–226, doi:10.1017/cbo9780511486241.009, ISBN 978-0-521-81899-5
  10. ^ Sergio, Baldi; Adam, Mahmoud (2006). Dagbani basic and cultural vocabulary. Univ. degli Studidi Napoli "L'Orientale". p. 10. ISBN 9788895044071. OCLC 613117515.
  11. ^ Fisch, Rudolf (1913). "Wörtersammlung Dagbané-Deutsch". MSOS. 16: 113–214.
  12. ^ Fisch, Rudolf (1912). "Grammatik der Dagomba-Sprache". Archiv für das Studium Deutscher Kolonialsprachen. 14: 1–79.
  13. ^ Fisch, Rudolf (1913). "Dagbane Sprachproben". M. Veröfffentlich Vom Seminar für Kolonialsprachen in Hamburg. 8: beiheft.
  14. ^ Tamakloe, E. Foster, ed. (1934). Dagomba Dictionary and Grammar. Accra: Government Printer.
  15. ^ Tamakloe, Emmanuel F. (1940). H.A.Blair (ed.). Dagomba (Dagbane) Dictionary. Accra: Government Printer.
  16. ^ Mahama, Ibrahim (2003). Dagbani-English Dictionary. Tamale, N/R: School for Life.
  17. ^ . Equinox. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 27 February 2015.
  18. ^ Alhassan, Salifu Nantogma (October 2014). "Sexism and gender stereotyping in the Dagbanli language". Gender and Language. 8 (3): 393–415. doi:10.1558/genl.v8i3.393.
  19. ^ "Dagbani Dictionary" (PDF).
  20. ^ "Dagbani Dictionary progress" (PDF).
  21. ^ Bodomo, Adams; Abubakari, Hasiyatu; Issah, Samuel Alhassan (2020). Handbook of the Mabia Languages of West Africa. Glienicke: Galda Verlag.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Olawsky, Knut (1999). Aspects of Dagbani grammar. Munich: Lincom.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h Inusah, Abdul-Razak (2017). "Patterns of Relative Clauses in Dagbanli". SAGE Open: 1–9.
  24. ^ Issah, Samuel Alhassan; Acheampong, Samuel Owoahene (2021). "Interrogative Pronouns in Dagbani and Likpakpaanl". Ghana Journal of Linguistics. 10 (3): 30–57. doi:10.4314/gjl.v10i2.2. S2CID 250234740.
  25. ^ a b c Issah, Samuel Alhassan (2018). On the structure of A-bar constructions in Dagbani: Perspectives of wh-questions and fragment answers (Ph.D.thesis ed.). Frankfurt am Main: Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität.
  26. ^ Issah, Samuel Alhassan (2018). A. Agwuele, A. Bodomo (ed.). The Form and Function of Dagbani Demonstratives. Vol. 2 (42 ed.). Routledge. pp. 281–296. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  27. ^ a b c d Issah, Samuel Alhassan (2013). "The function of the post verbal particle la in Dagbani". Studies of African Linguistics. 42 (2): 153–176. doi:10.32473/sal.v42i2.107272. S2CID 141937504.
  28. ^ Bodomo, Adams (1997). The structure of Dagaare. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
  29. ^ a b "The VP-periphery in Mabia languages | Dagbani". The VP-periphery in Mabia languages. Retrieved 2022-09-23.
  30. ^ a b c Issah, Samuel Alhassan; Smith, Peter W. (2020). "Subject and non-subject ex situ focus in Dagbani". Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics. 5 (1): 1–36. doi:10.5334/gjgl.664. S2CID 113397056.

External links edit

  • Knut Olawsky's Homepage
  • Dagbani kasahorow online dictionary
  • Dagbane dictionary (PDF)
  • The VP-periphery in Mabia languages

dagbani, language, dagbani, dagbane, also, known, dagbanli, dagbanle, language, spoken, ghana, northern, togo, native, speakers, estimated, around, dagbani, most, widely, spoken, language, northern, ghana, specifically, among, tribes, that, fall, under, author. Dagbani or Dagbane also known as Dagbanli or Dagbanle is a Gur language spoken in Ghana and Northern Togo Its native speakers are estimated around 1 170 000 1 Dagbani is the most widely spoken language in northern Ghana specifically among the tribes that fall under the authority of the King of Dagbon known as the Yaa Naa Dagbon is a traditional kingdom situated in northern Ghana and the Yaa Naa is the paramount chief or king who governs over the various tribes and communities within the Dagbon kingdom DagbaniDagbanliNative toGhana TogoRegionKingdom of DagbonEthnicity5 6 million Dagbamba 2021 census 1 Native speakers1 2 million 2013 1 Language familyNiger Congo Atlantic CongoVolta CongoSavannasGurNorthernOti VoltaWesternSoutheasternDagbaniDialectsNanuni Nanumba Tomosili NayahaliWriting systemLatin Ajami Arabic Language codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code dag class extiw title iso639 3 dag dag a Glottologdagb1246This article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA PersonDagbambia 2 LanguageDagbanliCountryDagbɔŋ Dagbani is closely related to and mutually intelligible with Mampruli Nabit Talni Kamara Kantosi and Hanga also spoken in Northern North East Upper East and Savannah Regions It is also similar to the other members of the same subgroup spoken in other regions including Dagaare and Wali spoken in Upper West Region of Ghana along with Frafra and Kusaal spoken in the Upper East Region of the country 3 4 In Togo Dagbani is spoken in the Savanes Region on the border with Ghana Contents 1 Dialects 2 Phonology 2 1 Vowels 2 2 Consonants 2 3 Tone 3 Orthography 4 Grammar 4 1 Lexicon 4 2 Noun Class System 4 3 Pronouns 4 3 1 Non emphatic Pronouns 4 3 1 1 Preverbal 4 3 1 2 Postverbal 4 3 2 Emphatic Pronouns 4 3 3 Reciprocal Pronouns 4 3 4 Reflexive Pronouns 4 3 5 Possessive Pronouns 4 3 6 Relative Pronouns 4 3 7 Interrogative Pronouns 4 3 8 Demonstrative Pronouns 4 3 9 Indefinite Pronouns 5 Syntax 5 1 Word Order 5 2 Verb Phrase 5 2 1 Preverbal Particles 5 2 1 1 Major Particles 5 2 2 Main Verb 5 2 3 Postverbal Particles 5 2 4 Conjoint Disjoint Markers 5 3 Questions 5 3 1 Ex situ 5 3 2 In situ 6 Dagbani language scholars 7 References 8 External linksDialects editDagbani has a major dialect split between Eastern Dagbani Nayahali centred on the traditional capital town of Yendi Naya and Western Dagbani Tomosili centred on the administrative capital of the Northern Region Tamale The dialects are however mutually intelligible and mainly consist of different root vowels in some lexemes and different forms or pronunciations of some nouns particularly those referring to local flora The words Dagbani and Dagbanli given above for the name of the language are respectively the Eastern and Western dialect forms of the name but the Dagbani Orthography Committee resolved that It was decided that in the spelling system lt Dagbani gt is used to refer to the Language and lt Dagbanli gt to the life and culture 5 original research in the spoken language each dialect uses its form of the name for both functions Phonology editVowels edit Dagbani has eleven phonemic vowels six short vowels and five long vowels Front Central Back High i ɨ u Mid e o Low a Front Central Back High iː uː Mid eː oː Low aː Olawsky 1999 puts the schwa e in place of ɨ unlike other researchers on the language 6 who use the higher articulated ɨ Allophonic variation based on tongue root advancement is well attested for 4 of these vowels i ɪ e e ɛ u ʊ and o ɔ Consonants edit Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Labial velar Glottal Nasal m n ɲ ŋ ŋ m Stop Affricate Voiceless p t t ʃ k k p ʔ Voiced b d d ʒ ɡ ɡ b Fricative Voiceless f s ʃ x h Voiced v z ʒ Lateral l Sonorant ɾ j w x mainly occurs phonemically among other Western dialects s debuccalizes as a glottal h when in intervocalic position ɡ debuccalizes as a glottal stop ʔ post vocalic position Sounds k ɡ s z are realized as t ʃ d ʒ ʃ ʒ when preceding front vowels d can be heard as ɾ when in post vocalic positions 6 Tone edit Dagbani is a tonal language in which pitch is used to distinguish words as in gballi ɡbalːɪ high high grave vs gballi ɡbalːɪ high low zana mat 7 The tone system of Dagbani is characterised by two level tones and downstep a lowering effect occurring between sequences of the same phonemic tone Orthography edit nbsp A teacher at School for Life a project in northern GhanaDagbani is written in a Latin alphabet with the addition of the apostrophe the letters ɛ ɣ ŋ ɔ and ʒ and the digraphs ch gb kp ŋm sh and ny The literacy rate used to be only 2 3 8 9 This percentage is expected to rise as Dagbani is now a compulsory subject in primary and junior secondary school all over Dagbon The orthography currently used 10 Orthography Committee d 1998 represents a number of allophonic distinctions Tone is not marked a b ch d e ɛ f g gb ɣ h i j k kp l m n ny ŋ ŋm o ɔ p r s sh t u w y z ʒ Grammar editDagbani is agglutinative but with some fusion of affixes The constituent order in Dagbani sentences is usually agent verb object Lexicon edit There is insight into a historical stage of the language in the papers of Rudolf Fisch reflecting data collected during his missionary work in the German Togoland colony in the last quarter of the nineteenth century especially the lexical list 11 though there is also some grammatical information 12 and sample texts 13 A more modern glossary was published in 1934 by a southern Ghanaian officer of the colonial government E Foster Tamakloe in 1934 14 with a revised edition by British officer Harold Blair 15 Various editors added to the wordlist and a more complete publication was produced in 2003 by a Dagomba scholar Ibrahim Mahama 16 According to the linguist Salifu Nantogma Alhassan 17 there is evidence to suggest that there are gender related double standards in the Dagbani language with more labels that trivialise females than males 18 Meanwhile the data was electronically compiled by John Miller Chernoff and Roger Blench whose version is published online 19 and converted into a database by Tony Naden on the basis of which a full featured dictionary is ongoing and can be viewed online 20 Noun Class System edit Noun Class 21 Example SG Example PL SG Suffix PL Suffix Gloss 1 tIb li tIb a li a ear 2 paG a paG ba a ba woman 3 gab ga gab si ga si rope 4 wab gu wab ri gu ri elephant 5 kur gu kur a gu a old 6 ko m kom ko ma kom a m ma a water Pronouns edit Each set of personal pronouns in Dagbani is distinguished regarding person number and animacy Besides the distinction between singular and plural there is an additional distinction between animate in the 3rd person Moreover Dagbani distinguishes between emphatic and non emphatic pronouns and there are no gender distinctions While there is no morphological differentiation between grammatical cases pronouns can occur in different forms according to whether they appear pre or postverbally 22 Non emphatic Pronouns edit Preverbal edit Preverbal pronouns serve as subjects of a verb and are all monosyllabic 22 Person SG PL 1 n ti 2 a yi 3 animate o bɛ 3 animate di di ŋa Postverbal edit Postverbal pronouns usually denote objects 22 Person SG PL 1 ma ti 2 a ya 3 animate o ba 3 animate li li ŋa Given the fact that preverbal and postverbal pronouns do not denote two complementary sets one could refer to them as unmarked or specifically marked for postverbal occurrence 22 Person SG PL Unmarked Marked Unmarked Marked 1 n ma ti 2 a yi ya 3 animate o bɛ ba 3 animate di li di ŋa li Emphatic Pronouns edit Emphatic pronouns in Dagbani serve as regular pronouns in that they can stand in isolation preverbally or postverbally 22 Person SG PL 1 mani tinima 2 nyini yinima 3 animate ŋuni ŋuna bɛna bana 3 animate dini dina ŋana Reciprocal Pronouns edit Reciprocals are formed by the addition of the word taba after the verb 22 Ti1PLŋmaaicuttaba each otherTi ŋmaai taba 1PL cut each other We cut each other 22 Reflexive Pronouns edit Reflexive pronouns are formed by the suffix maŋa which is attached to the non emphatic preverbal pronoun 22 O3SGŋmaagicuto maŋa 3SG REFLO ŋmaagi o maŋa 3SG cut 3SG REFL He cuts himself 22 The affix maŋa can also occur as an emphatic pronoun after nouns 22 O3SGzofriendmaŋa REFLO zo maŋa 3SG friend REFL His friend himself 22 Possessive Pronouns edit The possessive pronouns in Dagbani exactly correspond to the preverbal non emphatic pronouns which always proceed the possessed constituent O3SGyili houseO yili 3SG house His house 22 Relative Pronouns edit In Dagbani the relative pronouns are ŋʊn who and ni which 23 Bi sochildŋʊnRELzusteal PFVbaadoglaDETtʃaŋ ja go PFVBi so ŋʊn zu baa la tʃaŋ ja child REL steal PFV dog DET go PFV The child who stole the dog is gone 23 Ti3PLɲasee PFVbi sochildŋʊnRELzusteal PFVbaadogla DETTi ɲa bi so ŋʊn zu baa la 3PL see PFV child REL steal PFV dog DET We saw the child who stole the dog 23 The relative pronouns in Dagbani are not obligatory present and can also be absent depending on the context as the following example illustrates 23 AzimaAzimakaagivisit PFVji lihouseʃɛliproniRELdabuy PFVla DETAzima kaagi ji li ʃɛli ni da la Azima visit PFV house pro REL buy PFV DET Azima visited the house which I bought 23 AzimaAzimakaagivisit PFVji lihousela DETAzima kaagi ji li la Azima visit PFV house DET Azima visited the house which I bought 23 Relative pronouns in Dagbani can also be complex in its nature such that they consist of two elements an indefinite pronoun and an emphatic pronoun 22 Bi achildsoproŋʊnRELzusteal PFVbaadoglaDETtʃaŋ ja go PFVBi a so ŋʊn zu baa la tʃaŋ ja child pro REL steal PFV dog DET go PFV The child who stole the dog is gone 23 Su aKnifeʃɛliprodinRELpabeteebʊlʊtable SGzʊʔʊheadmaaDETkabiya break PFVSu a ʃɛli din pa teebʊlʊ zʊʔʊ maa kabiya Knife pro REL be table SG head DET break PFV The knife which was on the table is broken 23 Interrogative Pronouns edit Source 24 Interrogative pronouns in Dagbani make a distinction between human and non human Dagbani English bon ba what ŋuni who bozuɤu why ya where dini which ala how much bondali when saha dini when wula how Additionally interrogative pronouns inflect for number but not all of them Those inflecting for number belong to the semantic categories THING SELECTION PERSON 25 Semantic Category SG PL Gloss PERSON ŋuni banima who whom SELECTION dini dinnima which THING bo bonima what Demonstrative Pronouns edit Demonstrative pronouns in Dagbani make a morphological difference between the singular and plural form The demonstrative pronoun ŋɔ moves to the specifier of the functional NumP and if Num is plural then the plural morphem nima attaches to the demonstrative pronoun If Num is singular there is a zero morphem such that the demonstrative pronoun does not differ in its morphological form 26 Demonstrative Pronoun SG PL Gloss Proximal ŋɔ ŋɔnima this these Distal ŋɔ ha ŋɔnima ha that those Indefinite Pronouns edit Dagbani distinguishes not only between singular and plural for indefinite pronouns but also between animate Therefore there are two pairs of indefinite pronouns Indefinites are basically used in the same way as adjectives as their morphological form is similar to that of nouns and adjectives 22 In order to express an indefinite like something the inanimate singular form is combined with the noun bini thing SG PL Gloss animate lt so gt lt shɛba gt somebody animate lt shɛli gt lt shɛŋa gt somethingSyntax editWord Order edit Dagbani has a rigid SVO word order In the canonical sentence structure the verb precedes the direct and indirect object as well as adverbials The clause structure exhibits varying functional elements projecting various functional phrasal categories including tense aspect negation mood and the conjoint disjoint paradigm DawuniDawuniku r ikill IPFV CONJsoonsirabbitsmaa DEFDawuni ku r i soonsi maa Dawuni kill IPFV CONJ rabbits DEF Dawuni kills the rabbits 25 PaɣawomanmaaDETtigive PFVbihichildrennyuliyamzuŋo todayPaɣa maa ti bihi nyuli zuŋo woman DET give PFV children yam today The woman has given the children yam today 25 Verb Phrase edit The VP in Dagbani consists of a preverbal particle encoding tense aspect and mood the main verb and a postverbal particle which marks focus 27 Preverbal Particles edit Major Particles edit Tense Aspect Modal Particles 28 Dagbani today also once upon a time de one day away sa two or more days away daa habitual yi still not yet na actually siri once again as usual yaa suddenly just dii non future negative be future affix ne future negative ku imperative subjunctive negative de again lah Main Verb edit Each verb in Dagbani has two forms a perfective and an imperfective form with very few exceptions In general the perfective form is the unmarked form whereas the imperfective form corresponds to the progressive form or in other words it refers to an action which is still in progress 22 The perfective is nearly syncretic with the infinitive which in turn has an n prefix The imperfective is formed by the suffix di 22 The inflectional system in Dagbani is relatively poor as compared to other languages There is no grammatical agreement since number and person are not marked Tense is marked only under certain constraints Basically Dagbani makes a distinction between future and non future however the main distinction does not concern Tense but Aspect and occurs between perfective and imperfective Postverbal Particles edit The postverbal particle la marks presentational focus rather than contrastive focus 27 In comparison to the postverbal particle in Dagaare the function of this Dagbani particle is also not yet fully investigated There are native speakers who consider the particle to indicate that what is expressed to the hearer is not shared knowledge Issah 2013 on the other hand argues that the presence of la asserts new information while its absence indicates old information NapariNaparida Obuy PFVlaFOCloori lorryNapari da O la loori Napari buy PFV FOC lorry Napari has bought a lorry 27 NapariNaparida Obuy PFVloori lorryNapari da O loori Napari buy PFV lorry Napari has bought a lorry 27 Conjoint Disjoint Markers edit 29 Conjoint Disjoint Imperfective O3SGnyu r idrink IPFV CONJkom waterO nyu r i kom 3SG drink IPFV CONJ water He is drinking water O3SGnyu r a drink IPFV CONJO nyu r a 3SG drink IPFV CONJ He is drinking Perfective O3SGnyu Odrink PFV CONJkom waterO nyu O kom 3SG drink PFV CONJ water He drank water O3SGnyu ya drink PFV CONJO nyu ya 3SG drink PFV CONJ He drank Questions edit In Dagbani the question word can either appear in situ or ex situ 29 Ex situ edit Dagbani Question words Bɔ what Dini which Ya where Wula how ŋuni who ŋun whose Bɔ zuɤu why The basic word order in Dagbani questions is SVO such that the question word is fronted and followed by the focus marker ka This is the unmarked form and accepted by many native speakers as natural 22 YawherekaFOCa2SGchana go IPFVYa ka a chana where FOC 2SG go IPFV Where did you go to 22 BɔwhatkaFOCa2SGbɔra want IPFVBɔ ka a bɔra what FOC 2SG want IPFV What did you want 22 In situ edit Yes No question in Dagbani are formed by the disjunction bee or which either conjoints two propositions or which occurs sentence finally to indicate that the sentence with SVO order is actually a question A2SGniFUTkanacomebeeora2SGkuNEG FUTkana comeA ni kana bee a ku kana 2SG FUT come or 2SG NEG FUT come Will you come or will you not come 22 A2SGniFUTkanacomebee orA ni kana bee 2SG FUT come or Will you come or not 22 In addition to Yes No questions the question word can also occur in sentence final position This might correspond to echo questions 30 NapariNaparidabuy PFVbo whatNapari da bo Napari buy PFV what Napari bought what 30 NapariNaparidabuy PFVbua goatNapari da bua Napari buy PFV goat Napari bought a goat 30 Dagbani language scholars editFusheini Hudu Knut Olawsky Roger Blench Tony Naden Samuel Alhassan IssahReferences edit a b c Dagbani at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 nbsp Naden Tony 2014 Dagbani dictionary Webonary Naden Tony 1989 Gur Lanham MD University Press of America pp 141 168 Bendor Samuel John T 1989 The Niger Congo Languages Lanham MD University Press of America Committee Dagbani Orthography 1998 Approved Dagbani Orthography n p Tamale N R privately a b Hudu Fusheini 2010 Dagbani tongue root harmony a formal account with ultrasound investigation Vancouver University of British Columbia Olawsky 1997 Denteh A C Andrew Crakye 1974 Spoken Dagbani for non Dagbani beginners Pointer OCLC 4602509 Olawsky Knut J 2003 01 02 What is a word in Dagbani Word Cambridge University Press pp 205 226 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511486241 009 ISBN 978 0 521 81899 5 Sergio Baldi Adam Mahmoud 2006 Dagbani basic and cultural vocabulary Univ degli Studidi Napoli L Orientale p 10 ISBN 9788895044071 OCLC 613117515 Fisch Rudolf 1913 Wortersammlung Dagbane Deutsch MSOS 16 113 214 Fisch Rudolf 1912 Grammatik der Dagomba Sprache Archiv fur das Studium Deutscher Kolonialsprachen 14 1 79 Fisch Rudolf 1913 Dagbane Sprachproben M Verofffentlich Vom Seminar fur Kolonialsprachen in Hamburg 8 beiheft Tamakloe E Foster ed 1934 Dagomba Dictionary and Grammar Accra Government Printer Tamakloe Emmanuel F 1940 H A Blair ed Dagomba Dagbane Dictionary Accra Government Printer Mahama Ibrahim 2003 Dagbani English Dictionary Tamale N R School for Life About the author Salifu Nantogma Alhassan Equinox Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 27 February 2015 Alhassan Salifu Nantogma October 2014 Sexism and gender stereotyping in the Dagbanli language Gender and Language 8 3 393 415 doi 10 1558 genl v8i3 393 Dagbani Dictionary PDF Dagbani Dictionary progress PDF Bodomo Adams Abubakari Hasiyatu Issah Samuel Alhassan 2020 Handbook of the Mabia Languages of West Africa Glienicke Galda Verlag a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Olawsky Knut 1999 Aspects of Dagbani grammar Munich Lincom a b c d e f g h Inusah Abdul Razak 2017 Patterns of Relative Clauses in Dagbanli SAGE Open 1 9 Issah Samuel Alhassan Acheampong Samuel Owoahene 2021 Interrogative Pronouns in Dagbani and Likpakpaanl Ghana Journal of Linguistics 10 3 30 57 doi 10 4314 gjl v10i2 2 S2CID 250234740 a b c Issah Samuel Alhassan 2018 On the structure of A bar constructions in Dagbani Perspectives of wh questions and fragment answers Ph D thesis ed Frankfurt am Main Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universitat Issah Samuel Alhassan 2018 A Agwuele A Bodomo ed The Form and Function of Dagbani Demonstratives Vol 2 42 ed Routledge pp 281 296 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c d Issah Samuel Alhassan 2013 The function of the post verbal particle la in Dagbani Studies of African Linguistics 42 2 153 176 doi 10 32473 sal v42i2 107272 S2CID 141937504 Bodomo Adams 1997 The structure of Dagaare Stanford CSLI Publications a b The VP periphery in Mabia languages Dagbani The VP periphery in Mabia languages Retrieved 2022 09 23 a b c Issah Samuel Alhassan Smith Peter W 2020 Subject and non subject ex situ focus in Dagbani Glossa A Journal of General Linguistics 5 1 1 36 doi 10 5334 gjgl 664 S2CID 113397056 External links edit nbsp Dagbani edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia nbsp Dagbani language test of Wiktionary at Wikimedia Incubator Knut Olawsky s Homepage The UCLA Phonetics Lab Archive Dagbani Dagbani kasahorow online dictionary Dagbane dictionary PDF The VP periphery in Mabia languages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dagbani language amp oldid 1213351334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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