Abstract

This paper examines the phonological features that characterize the Amharic variety spoken in South Wəllo, an area which has been influenced by the diffusion of linguistic and cultural features arising from longstanding contact situations between Semitic and non-Semitic linguistic groups. Data from eight districts of the zone have shown that the South Wəllo variety has 26 consonant and seven vowel phonemes. The consonants are four fewer than that reported of the standard variety. The co-occurrence restrictions of the consonants and the syllable structures are the same as those of the standard variety. However, the phonological rules that operate at morpheme internal, morpheme and word boundary levels are different in the degree of complexity and directionality. These include inter-vocalic lenition of velar stops, word-final weakening of alveo-palatals, coalescence of lowering diphthongs, centering, lowering and fronting of vowels, metathesis of coronals and anteriors, and lexeme specific alternations of homorganic consonants. The description of the facts provides more substantive arguments in favor of the long-held claim that Wəllo constitutes a distinct dialect area.

Highlights

  • This paper examines the phonological features that characterize the Amharic variety spoken in South Wəllo, an area which has been influenced by the diffusion of linguistic and cultural features arising from longstanding contact situations between Semitic and non-Semitic linguistic groups

  • Data from eight districts of the zone have shown that the South Wəllo variety has 26 consonant and seven vowel phonemes

  • The phonological rules that operate at morpheme internal, morpheme and word boundary levels are different in the degree of complexity and directionality

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Summary

BAYE YIMAM abstract

This paper examines the phonological features that characterize the Amharic variety spoken in South Wəllo, an area which has been influenced by the diffusion of linguistic and cultural features arising from longstanding contact situations between Semitic and non-Semitic linguistic groups. The same descriptions showed that there was a palatalization process which reduced the alveo-dental stops /d/ and /t/ to [č] and [ǰ] in the context of a following high front vowel Such processes are not unique to the Wəllo variety as they are attested in other dialects such as Mənz (Hailu and Fisseha 1973), in North Shewa, and in South Gondər, as reported in Gebre (1999). The survey by Amsalu and Habtemariam (1973) showed that the variety of Wəllo is characterized by a large number of Arabic and Oromo loan words, resulting from longstanding secular and religious contacts between and among speakers of these languages or dialects. From the elicited data and recorded narratives, the following consonant phones have been identified

Labiodental f fy ɱ
Glottal h
Morpheme internal assimilation
Vowel harmonies
Word boundary assimilation
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