An analysis of the ghost augment in chiShona

Research articles

An analysis of the ghost augment in chiShona

DOI: 10.2989/02572117.2013.793945
Author(s): Calisto Mudzingwa , Canada , Maxwell Kadenge Department of Linguistics, School of Literature and Language Studies, Republic of South Africa

Abstract

There are two positions regarding the augment in chiShona. Doke (1931), Marconnès (1931), Fortune (1955) and Harford (1997) use vowel coalescence as the evidence for the existence of a ‘ghost’ augment (‘augment hypothesis’). They, however, provide no formal analysis. In contrast, Odden (1981) and Myers (1990) explain the same phenomenon as assimilation – an implicit denial of the existence of an augment (‘no augment hypothesis’). This article presents new evidence in support of the ‘augment hypothesis’, provides an Optimality Theory (hereafter OT) analysis and demonstrates that the ‘no augment hypothesis’ is indefensible.

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