All Stories

  1. A note on Nuba Mountain verb extensions
  2. The unabashed typologist: A Frans Plank Schubertiade
  3. Prefixal vowel length in Lulamogi: A stratal account
  4. Roland Kießling: Verbal serialisation in Isu (West-Ring) – a Grassfields language of Cameroon
  5. Does Gokana really have syllables? A postscript
  6. Information Structure in Bantu
  7. Phrasal Construction Tonology
  8. How autosegmental is phonology?
  9. Coda constraints on tone
  10. Chapter 5. Reconstructing the Niger-Congo Verb Extension Paradigm
  11. Enlarging the scope of phonologization*
  12. Word accentual patterns in the languages of the world
  13. A grammar of Goemai, by Birgit Hellwig
  14. On the Analysis of Tone in Mee (Ekari, Ekagi, Kapauku)
  15. Penultimate lengthening in Bantu
  16. In defense of prosodic typology: A response to Beckman and Venditti
  17. Post-Verbal subject in the Nzadi relative clause
  18. Historical linguistics and the comparative study of African languages (review)
  19. This is an overview of the nature of linguistic tone.
  20. Does Gokana really have no syllables? Or: what's so great about being universal?
  21. Do tones have features?
  22. The Macro-Sudan Belt and Niger-Congo Reconstruction
  23. Tonal and Non-Tonal Intonation in Shekgalagari
  24. More on post-nasal devoicing: The case of Shekgalagari
  25. Phonologist, Africanist, typologist: George N. (Nick) Clements (1940–2009)
  26. Focus marking in Aghem
  27. Focus in Aghem*
  28. The natural history of verb-stem reduplication in Bantu
  29. How (not) to do phonological typology: the case of pitch-accent
  30. Morphosyntactic Correspondence in Bantu Reduplication
  31. Universals in phonology
  32. Directional asymmetries in the morphology and phonology of words, with special reference to Bantu
  33. Universals of tone rules: 30 years later
  34. On the Representation of Tone in Peñoles Mixtec
  35. Where's phonology in typology?
  36. Typology in American linguistics: An appraisal of the field
  37. Word-prosodic typology
  38. The word in Luganda.
  39. Sound change, misanalysis, and analogy in the Bantu causative
  40. Suffix ordering in Bantu: a morphocentric approach
  41. Fieldwork as a state of mind
  42. Larry M. Hyman & Charles W. Kisseberth (eds.),Theoretical aspects of Bantu tone (CSLI Lecture Notes 82). Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications, 1998. Pp. x+366.
  43. The Interaction between Focus and Tone in Bantu
  44. Positional prominence and the ‘prosodic trough’ in Yaka
  45. The Phonology and Morphology of Kimatuumbi
  46. The phonology and morphology of Kimatuumbi By David Odden
  47. The syntax of body parts in Haya
  48. The Morpheme in Phonological Change
  49. Minimality and the prosodic morphology of Cibemba imbrication
  50. On the non-universality of tonal association ‘conventions’: evidence from Ciyao
  51. Heidi James Rosendall (1992). A phonological study of the Gwari lects. (SIL Language Data Africa Series 24). Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics. Pp. xi + 116.
  52. A New Approach to Tone in Luganda
  53. Language, Speech and Mind: Studies in Honour of Victoria Fromkin
  54. STRUCTURE PRESERVATION AND POSTLEXICAL TONOLOGY IN DAGBANI
  55. Conceptual issues in the comparative study of the Bantu verb stem
  56. The Niger-Congo Languages: A Classification and Description of Africa's Largest Language Family
  57. Moraic mismatches in Bantu
  58. Autosegmental Studies on Pitch Accent
  59. The Augment in Luganda Tonology
  60. Autosegmental studies on pitch accent Edited by Harry van der Hülst and Norval Smith
  61. Syllables and morpheme integrity in Kinande reduplication
  62. The Languages of Ghana
  63. Underspecification and vowel height transfer in Esimbi
  64. Prosodic domains in Kukuya
  65. Luganda and the strict layer hypothesis
  66. A Theory of Phonological Weight
  67. A theory of phonological weight By Larry M. Hyman
  68. Le systeme tonal du dioula d'Odienne
  69. Word domains and downstep in Bamileke-Dschang
  70. Roger Lass (1984). Phonology : an introduction to basic concepts. (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. xix + 362.
  71. Globality in the Kinande tone system
  72. Studies in Kalenjin Nominal Tonology
  73. Form and substance in language universals
  74. Logophoric Reference in Gokana
  75. A Reanalysis of Tonal Downstep
  76. Papers in African Linguistics in Honor of Wm. E. Welmers
  77. Historical Tonology11This research was supported in part by a National Science Foundation Grant, SOC 75–16487.
  78. Patricia Carrell, A transformational grammar of Igbo. London: Cambridge University Press, 1970. Pp. vii + 123.
  79. Nupe Three Years Later
  80. How Concrete Is Phonology?
  81. Form and substance in language universels
  82. 12 The syllable in Luganda phonology and morphology
  83. 3. A Model of Haya Tonology
  84. Register Tones and Tonal Geometry
  85. Cyclicity and base non-identity
  86. Do all languages have word accent?
  87. Prosodic Morphology and tone: the case of Chichewa