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<title>SEGMENTAL ASSIMILATION IN HAUSA NOMINAL AND VERBAL REDUPLICATIVE MORPHOLOGY</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1942" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1942</id>
<updated>2026-04-03T23:26:26Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-03T23:26:26Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>SEGMENTAL ASSIMILATION IN HAUSA NOMINAL AND VERBAL REDUPLICATIVE MORPHOLOGY</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1943" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name/>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1943</id>
<updated>2024-04-24T14:37:40Z</updated>
<published>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">SEGMENTAL ASSIMILATION IN HAUSA NOMINAL AND VERBAL REDUPLICATIVE MORPHOLOGY
Segmental assimilation, which affects features that are inherent in segments, is&#13;
generally situated within the phonology-morphology interface across languages,&#13;
including Hausa. Previous studies on Hausa reduplicative morphology have mainly&#13;
focused on segmental phonological modification, with little attention paid to&#13;
transparency and opacity in the context of assimilation. Thus, this study was designed&#13;
to examine the contextual nature of segmental assimilation in Hausa reduplicated&#13;
nouns and pluractional verbs, with a view to determining their domain, segments&#13;
involved and features that trigger or block the process.&#13;
John Goldsmith‘s Autosegmental Phonology was adopted as the framework, while the&#13;
descriptive design was employed. Three major cities in northern Nigeria (Sokoto,&#13;
Kano and Katsina) were purposively selected as representative of the three core Hausa&#13;
dialects. A paradigm of 20 reduplicative constructions were elicited from 45&#13;
purposively selected Hausa-literate native speakers; 15 from each dialect. This was&#13;
complemented with natural conversation. The data was transcribed and subjected to&#13;
morpho-phonological analysis.&#13;
Segmental assimilation in Hausa reduplicated nouns applies in the domain of adjacent&#13;
obstruents ([b, t, d, ɗ, k, ƙ, g, s, z]) and sonorants ([n, m, r, l, w]). Assimilatory&#13;
processes in this context are either total or partial and they mostly occur in&#13;
regressively with triggering features of place ([+lab], [+cor], [+pal]) and manner&#13;
([+cont], [+lat], [+nas]). This naturally results in the formation of morphosyntactic&#13;
reduplicated nouns in the language: dígí: → dígdígí: → díddígí ‗inquiry‘; múƙè →&#13;
múƙmúƙè → múmmúƙè ‗jaw‘and ɗírà → ɗírɗírà → ɗíɗɗírà ‗complicated diarrhea‘.&#13;
Assimilation also occurs in verb nominalisation to derive ‗deverbalised‘ adjectives&#13;
where non-palatal obstruent segments ([t, d, s, z]) synchronically become palatalised&#13;
([tʃ, ʤ]) as a result of the triggering effect of a suffixal vocalic feature ([+high]). In&#13;
Hausa pluractional morpho-syntactic verbs, segmental assimilation occurs more in the&#13;
domain of adjacent obstruents than sonorants and is usually triggered by the place&#13;
(labial, coronal, dorsal) and manner (continuant) features. This process results in the&#13;
formation of reduplicated verbs: dákà → dákdàkà → dáddàkà ‗pound repeatedly‘;&#13;
kámà → kámkàmà → kákkàmà ‗to catch repeatedly‘; dánnà → dándànnà →&#13;
dáddànà ‗to press repeatedly‘ and mánna → mánmànnà → mámmànnà ‗to paste&#13;
severally‘. The occurrence of segmental assimilation in the context of Hausa&#13;
reduplicated nouns and pluractional verbs, demonstrates feature-spreading. This&#13;
situation is exhibited in the language via association with both source segments in the&#13;
onset position of the reduplicant root-CVC and the target segments in the coda&#13;
position of the reduplicated CVC. Segmental assimilation in reduplicative domain in&#13;
Hausa admits off opacity without transparency.&#13;
Segmental assimilation in Hausa reduplicated nouns and pluractional verbs, is featuredriven, involving adjacency and opacity at the inter-morphemic boundary.
</summary>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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