The Morphosemantics of –Ni And –Foɔ Nouns in Akan
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University of Ghana
Abstract
This study aimed to establish the principles that motivate the formation of –ni and
–fo nouns in Akan, as an alternative to previous accounts on the subject. Our
primary objective was to examine the contributions –ni, -fo, prefixes and other
key morphological units (i.e., bases) make, both structurally and
semantically/functionally, towards the formation of –ni and –fo nouns in Akan,
assuming principles of Lieber’s (2004) Lexical Semantic Model, which is
decompositional in its approach to lexical analysis. From the current study, a base
performs one of two functions in a morphological context. That is, it either
denotes a collective (i.e., social) attribute, or an individual (human) attribute. -ni
strictly references a member of a collective social unit. The morpheme –fo has
two basic functional uses depending on the morphological context as indicated
below. (a) When -fo is augmented on nominal and adjectival bases, it presents
them as collective social attributes; and in this usage presents its (i.e., -fo’s)
referents as members of the collectivity that these attributes connote in the real
world. (b) -fo is attached to a verbal base to qualify it (i.e., the verbal attribute) as
an individual human/personal attribute. Number (i.e., singularity and plurality)
here is signaled by prefixes, ↄ- for the singular noun and a- for the plural. Where
a verbal base has additionally achieved a collective reference, the singular is
either realized with a -fo final, or a -ni final, and there is a single, lexically
ambiguous plural form for the two singular forms.
Description
MPhil. Linguistics