Typecraft v2.5
Jump to: navigation, search

Difference between revisions of "Typological Features Template for Luganda"

Line 42: Line 42:
 
|-
 
|-
 
|'''Morpho-syntactic Features'''
 
|'''Morpho-syntactic Features'''
|In the following fields you describe some of the basic morpho-syntactic parameters of [your language]
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''morphological classification (1)'''
 
| '''morphological classification (1)'''
Line 57: Line 56:
 
|-
 
|-
 
|nominal modification
 
|nominal modification
|In this field you indicate the basic types of nominal modifiers (adjectives, relative clauses, adpositions...)
+
|Luganda has determiners, demonstratives, numerals, quantifiers and nominal specifiers.
 
|-
 
|-
 
|nominal specification
 
|nominal specification
Line 70: Line 69:
 
3rd person singular, -e
 
3rd person singular, -e
 
3rd person plural, -abwe
 
3rd person plural, -abwe
 +
|-
 +
|1 OMU wa  e.g Omwana wa Mukasa 'Maria's child'
 +
2 ABA ba  e.g Abaana ba Mukasa 'Mukasa' children'
 +
3 OMU ga  e.g Omuti gwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's tree'
 +
4 EMI gya  e.g Emisooli gya Mukasa 'Mukasa trees'
 +
5 ELI lya  e.g Eliiso lya Mukasa 'Mukasa's eye'
 +
6 AMA ga  e.g Amaaso ga Mukasa 'Mukasa's eyes'
 +
7 EKI kya  e.g Ekikopo kya Mukasa 'Mukasa's cup'
 +
8 EBI bya  e.g Ebikopo bya Mukasa 'Mukasa's cups'
 +
9 EN  ya  e.g Embuzi ya Mukasa 'Mukasa's goat'
 +
10 EN za  e.g Embuzi za Mukasa 'Mukasa's goats'
 +
11 OLU lwa  e.g Olugoye lwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's cloth'
 +
12 AKA ka  e.g Engoye za Mukasa 'Mukasa's clothes'
 +
13 OTU twa  e.g Otulo twa Mukasa 'Mukasa's sleep'
 +
14 OBU bwa  e.g Obutungulu bwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's onions'
 +
15 OKU kwa  e.g Okugulu kwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's leg'
 +
20 OGU gwa ''all nouns here are derogatory''
 +
22 AGA ga ''all nouns here are derogatory''
 +
 
|-
 
|-
 
|pronominal system
 
|pronominal system
| In this field you indicate if [your language] has free pronoun forms? Are pronouns marked for their grammatical function (object versus subject pronouns)? Does your language have bound pronouns (affixes) or pronoun doubling? Are reflexives expressed by pronouns?
+
| Luganda has both free and bound pronoun forms.
 +
The free pronoun forms are:
 +
Singular Plural
 +
1sr Person Nze ‘I’ Ffe ‘We’
 +
2nd Person Ggwe ‘You’ Mmwe ‘You’
 +
3rd Person Ye ‘He/She’ Bo ‘They’
 +
All pronouns are marked for their grammatical functions: there are subject and object pronouns. All pronouns in Luganda appear as prefixes. Luganda also has double object constructions.
 +
|Subject and Object Personal pronouns
 +
Subject Pronouns
 +
            Singular   Plural
 +
1st Person n-     tu-
 +
2nd Person o-     mu-
 +
3rd Person      a-     ba-
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|Object Pronouns
 +
            Singular    Plural
 +
1st Person    -n- -tu-
 +
2nd Person  -ku- -ba-
 +
3rd Person  -mu- -ba-
 +
|Example sentences
 +
Nsoma ekitabo ‘I am reading a book’
 +
Osoma ekitabo ‘You are reading a book’
 +
Asoma kitabo ‘He/She is reading a book’
 +
Tusoma ekitabo ‘We are reading a book’
 +
Musoma ekitabo ‘We are reading a book’
 +
Basoma ekitabo ‘They are reading a book’
 +
|Example sentences: object pronouns
 +
Ansomesa ‘S/he is teaching me’
 +
Atusomesa ‘S/he is teaching us’
 +
Akusomesa ‘S/he is teaching you’ [singular]
 +
Abasomesa ‘S/he is teaching you’ [2nd person plural]
 +
Abasomesa ‘S/he is teaching them’ [3rd person plural]
 +
Yeesomesa ‘S/he is teaching him/herself’ [reflexive]
 +
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
|'''Verbal Phrases'''
 
|'''Verbal Phrases'''
Line 81: Line 133:
 
|-
 
|-
 
|TAM  
 
|TAM  
|In this field you indicate which tense and/or aspects are morphologically or tonally marked; does [your language] make use of periphrastic tense or aspect constructions?
+
|A Luganda verb is agglutinable for 3 tenses: the present tense, the past and the future.
 +
The present tense is zero marked. E.g Nfumba emmere ‘I cook food’or ‘I am cooking food.’
 +
Past tense is marked by three aspect constructions which appear either as prefixes and suffixes.
 +
i.e. Nfumbye emmere ‘I have cooked food.’
 +
Nafumbye emmere ‘I cooked food.’
 +
Nafumba emmere ‘I cooked food’ [far past]
 +
Future tense is marked by two aspect constructions.
 +
Banaafumba emmere ‘They will cook food’
 +
Balifumba emmere ‘They will cook food’ [far future’
 +
 
 +
|In some constructions, Luganda displays periphrastic tenses. E.g
 +
Nfumba emmere bulijjo ‘I always cook food’
 +
Nja kufumba emmere ‘I will cook food’
 +
 
 +
|Mood
 +
Luganda makes use of the following moods: imperative mood, conditional mood, subjunctive mood, indicative mood and infinitive mood.
 +
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
|infinitival forms
 
|infinitival forms
|In this field you indicate if [your language] makes use of an infinitive marker? How many infinitival forms does your language have?
+
|Luganda has one infinitive form marked by (o)ku-. It should be noted that all Luganda verbs are bound morphs, sometimes called deverbal nouns, except about two only that appear as free morphs. The infinitive (o)ku- relates to the 15 OKU noun class.
 
|-
 
|-
 
|verbal constructions
 
|verbal constructions
|In this field you indicate if [your language] has ditransitive constructions, serial verb constructions or complex verb forms composed of several verbs. Does your language have so called light verbs, perhaps only used to indicate a certain tense or aspect?
+
|Luganda has traditional ditransitive Verbs as well as those derived by verb extensions that can take two or more objects. Luganda has serial verb constructions or complex verb forms composed of several verbs. Luganda also has light verbs used to mark aspect.
 
|-
 
|-
 
|'''Adpositions'''
 
|'''Adpositions'''
|In this field you indicate if [your language[ makes use of prepositions or postpositions. Does your language have spatial nouns? Does your language use adpositions or particles to indicate grammatical relations between the verb and a nominal argument?
+
|Luganda has prepositions at both word and phrase level. E.g mu ‘in’, ‘among’, ‘within’, ‘to’, ‘from’; ku ‘at’, ‘on’, ‘to’; e ‘to’ etc. At phrase level, they appear as, waggulu ku… ‘on top of…’, waggulu wa… ‘above’ etc. 
 +
In indicating the grammatical relation between the verb and the noun, Luganda concordial agreements based on the noun class system.
 +
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
|'''Complementation'''
 
|'''Complementation'''
Line 100: Line 170:
 
|'''Short Bibliography
 
|'''Short Bibliography
 
|-
 
|-
 +
|-# Ashton, Ethel O., and others (1954) A Luganda Grammar, London: Longmans, Green.
 +
# Snoxall, R.A. (1967) Luganda-English Dictionary. Clarendon Press, Oxford
 +
# Murphy, John D. (1972) Luganda-English Dictionary. Catholic University of America Press
 +
# Chesswas, J. D. (1963) Essentials of Luganda. Oxford University Press
 +
 +
#Kiingi, K.B. (2009) Enkuluze ya Oluganda eya e Makerere, olusunsula 2a, Kampala:
 +
Fountain Publishers
  
 
|}
 
|}

Revision as of 15:36, 18 August 2010

By Medadi Erisa Ssentanda

  1. Snoxall, R.A. (1967) Luganda-English Dictionary. Clarendon Press, Oxford
  2. Murphy, John D. (1972) Luganda-English Dictionary. Catholic University of America Press
  3. Chesswas, J. D. (1963) Essentials of Luganda. Oxford University Press
  1. Kiingi, K.B. (2009) Enkuluze ya Oluganda eya e Makerere, olusunsula 2a, Kampala:
Fountain Publishers
Feature Description
Phonological Features In the following fields you describe the phonological inventory o [your language]
Vowel inventory Luganda has only 5 vowels: [ a, e, i, o, u ]. Any of them can be long or short.

i: high, front u: high, back e: mid, front o: mid, back a:front, low

Vowel harmony

Nominal Vowel harmony

Vowel harmony in Luganda relates to the Luganda Vowel Chart, which contains only five vowels. The vowel on the noun class dictates the initial vowel that the noun takes on. The Luganda noun classes allow only three vowels, namely: [u, i, a]. The occurence of any of those vowels on a noun class dictates the initial vowel in this manner: [u] harmonizes with [o], [i] harmonizes with [e] and [a] harmonizes with [a]. Examples, omuti, emiti, amata.
Verbal Vowel harmony This harmony occurs on suffixes only. This harmony follows this manner: verbs whose penultimate syllable has [a, u, i] harmonizes with [i] in suffixing the root. Verbs whose penultimate syllable has [e, o] harmonizes with [e] in suffing the root.

Examples: sab-a = sabira, fun-a = funira, sib-a = sibira, som-a, sek-a = sekera, simool-a = simoolera

Consonant inventory There are mainly 20 consonants in Luganda: [p, b, m, w, f, v, t, d, n, l, s, z, c, j, y, ny, k, g, ŋ, nÿ ]. Bilabials [p, b, m], labiodentals [f, v], alveolars [t, d, n, l, s, z], alveopatal [nÿ], palatals [c, J,nnya], velars [k, g, ŋ], semivowels [w,y].Each of those consonants can combine with any vowel to form a syllable. All consonants can be long with the exception of [w,y,l]. A long consonant is one that is pronounced with force as compared to one that is single.
Consonantal Combinations [m] is followed by bilabials. [n] is followed by all other consonants except [l]. [n] is followed by all alveolars except [l]. [ŋ] is followed by all velars.
Semi vowel combinations All consonants can be followed by a semivowel except labiodentals, [f, v]. [f, v] cannot be followed by [w]. [s,z,c,J,nÿ] are not followed by [y]. [ŋ] does not allow combining with [y].

Allophonetic sounds include: [β, ɱ, ɽ, l]

Tone Luganda is a pitch-accent or a two tone language. Tone in the roots of uttarances can be arranged as HL or HH. Sometimes a resultant HF tone may occur. The two basic tones are modified by downstepping and downdrifting.
Syllable Structure Basic syllable structures: V, CV, CV:, C:V, C:V:, NCV, NCV:, Cw/yV, C:w/yV, C:w/yV:, NCw/yV, N
Morpho-syntactic Features
morphological classification (1) Luganda is principally/basically agglutinative, which in many cases exhibit modifications in the roots of verbs when particular affixes are added.
morphological classification (2) Luganda is generally a head-marking language at both phrase and sentence level. For instance, Omwana (N) omuto (Adj) akuba (V) embwa (Obj) [A little child is beating a dog]. In pronominalisation forms, it is possible to have a dependent marking in the verb phrase. For instance, Omwana omuto agikuba. [A little child is beating it]. A- [Subj], -gi- [Obj], kub-a [V].
Nominal Phrases In the following fields we aim for a description of some of the basic morpho-syntactic properties of nominal constituents
syntactic structure

|In this field you describe the linear order of elements in the noun phrase

nominal modification Luganda has determiners, demonstratives, numerals, quantifiers and nominal specifiers.
nominal specification In this field you list the nominal specifiers. Does [your language] have determiners, demonstratives (deixis), numerals, quantifiers. Are there affixes expressing reference, deixis.
possession Luganda uses pronouns to indicate possession in different grammatical persons.

1st person Singular, –ange 1st person Plural, -affe 2nd person singular, -o 2nd person plural, -ammwe 3rd person singular, -e 3rd person plural, -abwe

1 OMU wa e.g Omwana wa Mukasa 'Maria's child'

2 ABA ba e.g Abaana ba Mukasa 'Mukasa' children' 3 OMU ga e.g Omuti gwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's tree' 4 EMI gya e.g Emisooli gya Mukasa 'Mukasa trees' 5 ELI lya e.g Eliiso lya Mukasa 'Mukasa's eye' 6 AMA ga e.g Amaaso ga Mukasa 'Mukasa's eyes' 7 EKI kya e.g Ekikopo kya Mukasa 'Mukasa's cup' 8 EBI bya e.g Ebikopo bya Mukasa 'Mukasa's cups' 9 EN ya e.g Embuzi ya Mukasa 'Mukasa's goat' 10 EN za e.g Embuzi za Mukasa 'Mukasa's goats' 11 OLU lwa e.g Olugoye lwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's cloth' 12 AKA ka e.g Engoye za Mukasa 'Mukasa's clothes' 13 OTU twa e.g Otulo twa Mukasa 'Mukasa's sleep' 14 OBU bwa e.g Obutungulu bwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's onions' 15 OKU kwa e.g Okugulu kwa Mukasa 'Mukasa's leg' 20 OGU gwa all nouns here are derogatory 22 AGA ga all nouns here are derogatory

pronominal system Luganda has both free and bound pronoun forms.

The free pronoun forms are: Singular Plural 1sr Person Nze ‘I’ Ffe ‘We’ 2nd Person Ggwe ‘You’ Mmwe ‘You’ 3rd Person Ye ‘He/She’ Bo ‘They’ All pronouns are marked for their grammatical functions: there are subject and object pronouns. All pronouns in Luganda appear as prefixes. Luganda also has double object constructions.

Subject and Object Personal pronouns

Subject Pronouns

            Singular	   Plural	

1st Person n- tu- 2nd Person o- mu- 3rd Person a- ba-

Object Pronouns
           Singular    Plural

1st Person -n- -tu- 2nd Person -ku- -ba- 3rd Person -mu- -ba-

Example sentences

Nsoma ekitabo ‘I am reading a book’ Osoma ekitabo ‘You are reading a book’ Asoma kitabo ‘He/She is reading a book’ Tusoma ekitabo ‘We are reading a book’ Musoma ekitabo ‘We are reading a book’ Basoma ekitabo ‘They are reading a book’

Example sentences: object pronouns

Ansomesa ‘S/he is teaching me’ Atusomesa ‘S/he is teaching us’ Akusomesa ‘S/he is teaching you’ [singular] Abasomesa ‘S/he is teaching you’ [2nd person plural] Abasomesa ‘S/he is teaching them’ [3rd person plural] Yeesomesa ‘S/he is teaching him/herself’ [reflexive]

Verbal Phrases In the following fields serve for the description of some of the basic morpho-syntactic properties of verbal constituents
word order In this field you indicate the basic word order of your language (SOV, SOV ...)
TAM A Luganda verb is agglutinable for 3 tenses: the present tense, the past and the future.

The present tense is zero marked. E.g Nfumba emmere ‘I cook food’or ‘I am cooking food.’ Past tense is marked by three aspect constructions which appear either as prefixes and suffixes. i.e. Nfumbye emmere ‘I have cooked food.’ Nafumbye emmere ‘I cooked food.’ Nafumba emmere ‘I cooked food’ [far past] Future tense is marked by two aspect constructions. Banaafumba emmere ‘They will cook food’ Balifumba emmere ‘They will cook food’ [far future’

In some constructions, Luganda displays periphrastic tenses. E.g

Nfumba emmere bulijjo ‘I always cook food’ Nja kufumba emmere ‘I will cook food’

Mood

Luganda makes use of the following moods: imperative mood, conditional mood, subjunctive mood, indicative mood and infinitive mood.

infinitival forms Luganda has one infinitive form marked by (o)ku-. It should be noted that all Luganda verbs are bound morphs, sometimes called deverbal nouns, except about two only that appear as free morphs. The infinitive (o)ku- relates to the 15 OKU noun class.
verbal constructions Luganda has traditional ditransitive Verbs as well as those derived by verb extensions that can take two or more objects. Luganda has serial verb constructions or complex verb forms composed of several verbs. Luganda also has light verbs used to mark aspect.
Adpositions Luganda has prepositions at both word and phrase level. E.g mu ‘in’, ‘among’, ‘within’, ‘to’, ‘from’; ku ‘at’, ‘on’, ‘to’; e ‘to’ etc. At phrase level, they appear as, waggulu ku… ‘on top of…’, waggulu wa… ‘above’ etc.

In indicating the grammatical relation between the verb and the noun, Luganda concordial agreements based on the noun class system.

Complementation In this field you describe complementation strategies. Does [your language] make use of complementizers?
Special Properties of [your language] In this field you should mention properties of [your language] which did not fit into any of the other categories mentioned in this template
Short Bibliography