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Typological Features Template for Akan

By Lilian Haugereid

Feature Description
Phonological Features In the following I will describe the phonological inventory of Akan and the features that its dialects share. Some of these dialects are Asante, Fante and Akuapem as well as Bono. Dialects of Akan are mainly characterized by phonological differences, but other difference can also be described. The account we are providing here is directed towards a description of the grammatical features that all dialects of Akan share.
Vowel Inventory Vowels in Akan are described here under five headings: oral, nasalised, and long vowels, diphthongs, and vowel harmony.


A. Oral Vowels

Akan has 9/10 vowels, depending on the dialect: [e,ɔ,a,o,ɛ i,u,ɪ,æ,ʊ ] This is because Akan has the phonological feature Advanced Tongue Root (ATR), and for that matter the vowels are divided into two sets, one + ATR and the other - ATR. In the orthography, the advanced vowels e and o represent two contrastive vowels, so that these vowels represent two vowel sounds.

For example 1:

         Akan   Ph.Trans  English    Akan       Ph.Trans       English
         te(w)  /tɪ(w)/   'tear'     kɛsi       /kɛsɪ/         'big'
         fie    /fie/     'home'     esiw/esie  /(esiw)(esie)/ 'anthill'
         to(w)  /tʊw/     'trow'     horo       /hʊhʊ/         'wash'
         obi    /obi/     'someone'  ako        /ako/          'parrot'
                                                               

NB"Ph.Trans" refers to phonetic translation.

As can be seen from example 1 above, vowel e in orthography represents vowels /ɪ/, and /e/ and vowel o represents /o/, and/ʊ/. So in any written Akan text, you will find these 7 vowels main vowels: i e ɛ a ɔ o u, as in the Akan sentence below.

Example 2:
kofi bɛtɔn
“Kofi will sell (something).”
kòfí
kofi
Kofi
Np
bɛ´tɔ´ń
bɛ́tɔn
FUTsell
Vtr


The two different sets of Akan vowels based ATR is discussed under "Vowel Harmnoy" below.

NB: It can also be mentioned here that the vowels mostly carry tone(s); (as examplifeid above) which will be discussed later under "Tone"

B. Nasalised Vowels

Nasalisation is an important phonological feature in Akan. It can for example bring changes in meaning. There are five nasalised vowels and they are marked in transcription by placing (~), which is normally called the tilde, above the vowel.

These are the five nasalised vowels: ἶ, ĩ, ã, ẽ, ῦ, and ũ

Example 3:
          Fante      Asante      Akuapem      English
          hũ - hu    hũ - hu     hũw - huw   see - blow (air) 
                                                
                                                (Dolphyne 1988:4)

NB: In most cases the difference between Fante and Asante is tone.

As a result of assimilation, a neighbouring nasal sound, can give its nasalitiy quality to a vowel; as in this word:

            nkwa:  /ŋ̃kʷã/ - 'life'

NB: Vowels [o, ɛ, ɔ, o] are only nasalised in the Fante dialects


C. Long Vowels

Vowels in Akan can either be long or short. The length of the vowel can determine the meaning difference of some words in the language. In orthography, long vowels are represented by doubling them.

 Examples 4:
           Akan   English    Akan     English
           da      sleep     daa      everyday
           sa      dance     saa      exactly 
           kɔ      go        kɔɔ      red


D. Diphthongs

As indicated above, the occurrence of identical vowels in an Akan word is considered as long vowels. There are also the occurance of a sequence of unidentical vowels. These are produced when the tongue glides from one articulation to another.

E. Disyllabic Vowel Combinations

Vowel harmony

The harmony of vowels is defined as the restriction on the occurance of certain vowels in the same word. As already mentioned above, in the production of Akan vowels, the position of the tongue determines whether a vowel has the feature "advanced tongue root" or "retracted tongue root", +ATR and -ATR respectively. The + Advanced Tongue root vowels are produced by pushing the root of the tongue forward and it is the opposite for the production of the unadvanced tongue root vowels. The root of the tongue is retracted or pushed backward.

           Set A(+ATR) [i, e, æ, o, u]
           Set B(-ATR) [ɪ, ɛ, a, ɔ, ʊ]

It is known that this feature places the restriction on the occurrance of vowels from set A and set B. Most Akan words have vowels from either set A or B.

Example 5:
           +ATR      English      -ATR      English
           /koko/   'chest'      /kɔkɔ(w)/   'red'
           /Kun(u)/ 'husband'    /kʊn/       'neck' 
           /efie/    'home'      /ɛfɪɛ/      'vomit'
          */adi/     'has eaten' /ædɪ/       'thing' 

So the vowels can be paired as belwo; those on the left +ATR and on the right -ATR. The front vowels are produced with the front, the central, the center of the tongue and the back, the back part of the tongue.

           Front    Central  Back
            i/ɪ      æ/a     o/ɔ
            e/ɛ              ʊ/u

Harmany Exceptions: The asterisk(*) placed on the last example under 'Example 5' is because the occurance of vowel /a/


The table below shows an overview of the vowels in the language.

   Orthography         Phonetic Symbols         Set A         Set B   
      i                   i                      i
      e                   ɪ                                   ɪ
      ɛ                   e                      e                 
                          ɛ                                   ɛ
      a                   æ                      æ
                          a                                   a
     
     
      ɔ                   ɔ                                   ɔ
      o                   o                      o
      u                   ʊ                                   ʊ
                          u                      u

In summary, these are the vowels and their names in Akan:

           i       Advanced High Front vowel
           ɪ       Unadvanced High Front vowel
           e       Advanced Mid Front vowel
           ɛ       Unadvanced Mid Front vowel
           æ       Advanced Low Central vowel
           a       Undvanced Low Central vowel
           o       Adavnced Mid Back vowel
           ɔ       Unadvanced Mid Back vowel
           u       Advanced High Back vowel
           ʊ       Unadvanced High Back vowel
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morphological classification (1) [Your language] could be an isolating language (not (or nearly not) making use of morphology, agglutinative, such as the Bantu languages of Africa, or synthetic, such as the Saami languages of Scandinavia, or even polysynthetic such as Greenlandic. In this field you classify [your language] according to these parameters if possible.
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