Grammar-160
Grammar-160
For ‘milk’ and ‘borassus palm’, the 3Sg possessor form can also be unsuffixed, with
no inserted semivowel, hence the variants àꜛ wà: and àꜛ bè:. For ‘milk’ there is also a
parallel 2Sg variant wá:↑-nôŋ. Since the alienable nouns ‘milk’, ‘okra’, and ‘borassus
palm’ are not frequently possessed, I suspect that their short 3Sg and 2Sg possessor
variants reflect the analogical influence of inalienable bà: ‘share, portion’ and mâ:
‘name’ (3Sg àꜛ bà: ‘his/her share’ and à mâ: ‘his/her name’, §4.1.4.2). However, this
influence does not seem to have affected the 1Sg possessor forms (contrast alienable
wá:↑-y-è ‘my milk’ with bà:-y+H ‘my share’).
The third person pronominal possessor morphemes, all proclitic, are added to the
same tonal PossSg form illustrated in preceding sections with 3Sg proclitic à. (153)
illustrates one noun with {H}-toned final/definite singular (‘dog’), and another with
{L}-toned final/definite singular (‘grass’). The unpossessed final/definite singular
forms provide the segmental shape of the PossSg, but the latter undergo tonal
changes.
Final/definite singular háns-ó+H and sùb-ò+H are converted into the PossSg forms
háns-ò and sùb-ô by allowing Tonal Rhythm (§3.9.4.1) to apply and by deleting the
floating H. The 3Sg combination with à is the most transparent phonologically. The
proclitic is optionally upstepped (àꜛ) before a L-toned syllable.
The 3Pl proclitic is associated with a floating H-tone that is realized on a
following L-toned syllable. In the case of a {L}-toned trisyllabic, the 3Pl possessor
form ends up with H.L.<HL> tones, as in hùmbùr-ò+H ‘mortar’, PossSg hùmbùrô,
3Pl possessor ɲòŋ húmbùrô. The trisyllabic L.H.L noun dàbár-ò+H ‘stratagem’ has
PossSg dàbár-ò and 3Pl possessor ɲòŋ dáꜜbár-ò. In ‘their grass’ from /ɲòŋ+H sùb-