Mungbam language
{{Short description|Southern Bantoid language of Cameroon}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2023}}
{{Infobox language
| name = Mungbam
| altname = Abar
| nativename =
| pronunciation = {{ipa|[mùŋ·gbàm]|}}
| states = Cameroon
| region = Lower Fungom
| speakers = {{sigfig|1850|2}}–{{sigfig|2150|2}}
| date = 2012
| familycolor = Niger-Congo
| fam2 = Atlantic–Congo
| fam3 = Benue–Congo
| fam4 = Southern Bantoid
| fam5 = Western Beboid (geographic)
| fam6 = Mungbam–Missong
| dia1 = Munken
| dia2 = Biya
| dia3 = Abar
| dia4 = Ngun
| iso3 = mij
| notice = IPA
| glotto = abar1238
| glottorefname = Mungbam
}}
Mungbam is a Southern Bantoid language of the Lower Fungom region of Cameroon. It is traditionally classified as a Western Beboid language, but the language family is disputed.{{cite web|url=http://www.sil.org/iso639-3/cr_files/2012-099.pdf |title=ISO 639-3 Registration Authority. Request for Change to ISO 639-3 Language Code|date=19 June 2012 |website=sil.org|access-date=1 July 2023}} Good et al. uses a more accurate name, the 'Yemne-Kimbi group,' but proposes the term 'Beboid.'{{sfn|Good|Lovegren|Mve|Tchiemouo|2011|pp=2,9}}
The language is spoken in four villages, Abar, Munken, Ngun, and Biya (formerly known as
Phonology
= Consonants =
The consonant inventory is restricted based on the consonant's placement within the morpheme and the type of morpheme. For example, the consonant inventory for affixes is very different from the consonant inventory of word stems.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|+Consonants of Mungbam{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=37}} ! colspan="2" | ! Labial ! colspan="2" | Dental ! Velar ! Glottal |
colspan="2" | Nasal
| {{IPA link|m}} | colspan="2" | {{IPA link|n}} | {{IPA link|ɲ}} | {{IPA link|ŋ}} | | |
---|
rowspan="2" | Plosive/ Affricate ! {{small|voiceless}} | ({{IPA link|p}}){{efn|/p/ has only been found in Munken, Missong, and Abar, and only in the stem pi, meaning 'die.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|pp=36–37}} Good et al. suggest {{IPAblink|p}} originates from the {{IPAblink|kp}} because kpê is cognate with pi in Biya and Ngun.{{sfn|Good|Lovegren|Mve|Tchiemouo|2011|p=19}}}} | {{IPA link|t}} | {{IPA link|ts}} | {{IPA link|tɕ}} | {{IPA link|k}} | {{IPA link|kp}} | |
{{small|voiced}}
| {{IPA link|b}} | {{IPA link|d}} | {{IPA link|dz}} | {{IPA link|dʒ}} | {{IPA link|g}} | {{IPA link|gb}} | |
colspan="2" | Fricative
| {{IPA link|f}} | colspan="2" | {{IPA link|s}} | {{IPA link|ɕ}} | {{IPA link|x}} | | {{IPA link|h}} |
colspan="2" | Liquid
| | colspan="2" | {{IPA link|l}} | | | | |
colspan="2" | Glide
| | colspan="2" | | {{IPA link|ɥ}} {{ns}} {{IPA link|j}} | | {{IPA link|w}} | |
{{notelist}}
Consonants vary slightly between dialects.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
= Vowels =
Vowel quality in Mungbam varies across dialects. The vowel inventory is not restricted by the vowel's placement within the morpheme.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|pp=66–68}}
Lovegren provides a vowel inventory common across all dialects.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=30}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|+Vowels of Mungbam |
! Front
! Central ! Back |
---|
Close
| {{IPA link|i}} | {{IPA link|ɨ}} | {{IPA link|u}} |
Close-mid
| {{IPA link|e}} | | {{IPA link|o}} |
Mid
| {{IPA|ι}}{{efn|The symbol [ι] is used to transcribe a vowel which is very similar to [e], only more flat and slightly lower.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=31}}}} | {{IPA link|ə}} | {{IPA link|ʊ}}{{efn|The symbol [ʊ] is used to transcribe a back round vowel which is at the same height or slightly lower than [o].{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=31}}}} |
Open-mid
| {{IPA link|ɛ}} | | {{IPA link|ɔ}} |
Open
| | {{IPA link|a}} | |
{{notelist}}
Vowel inventories for each dialect are listed below.{{sfn|Good|Lovegren|Mve|Tchiemouo|2011}}
{{columns-start}}
class="wikitable"
|+Abar ! !Front !Central !Back |
High
|i e | |u o |
---|
Mid
|ɪ ɛ |(ə) |ʊ |
Low
| |a | |
class="wikitable"
|+Ngun ! !Front !Central !Back |
High
|i e | |u o |
---|
Mid
|ɪ ɛ |(ə) |ʊ ɔ |
Low
| |a | |
class="wikitable"
|+Munken ! !Front !Central !Back |
High
|i | |u o |
---|
Mid
|e ɛ |(ə) |ɔ |
Low
| |a | |
{{column}}
class="wikitable"
|+Missong ! !Front !Central !Back |
High
|i | |u o |
---|
Mid
|e ɛ |ə |o͡a ɔ |
Low
| |a | |
class="wikitable"
|+Biya ! !Front !Central !Back |
High
|i e | |u o |
---|
Mid
|ɪ e͡a |ə |ɔ |
Low
| |a | |
{{columns-end}}
= Tone =
Tone forms an integral part of Mungbam phonology and morphology. Tones distinguish nouns which are otherwise homophonous. With some exceptions, nouns are assigned tones and retain those tones regardless of syntax and inflection.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}} There are four levels of tone in Mungbam.{{sfn|Good|Lovegren|Mve|Tchiemouo|2011|p=21}}
class="wikitable"
|+Examples of Tone{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=44}} !Mungbam !Translation |
bá-bja᷅ŋ
|"adjumbu people" |
bà-bjâŋ
|"children" |
= Syllable Structure =
Attested syllable types vary between stem-initial and non-stem-initial syllables. Word stems in Mungbam can either be monosyllabic or disyllabic. Consonants comprising the only syllable in a monosyllabic stem or the first syllable in a disyllabic stem are referred to as 'stem-initial,' all other consonants are considered 'stem-final.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=23}}
class="wikitable"
|+Examples of Syllables{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=45}} !Mungbam !Translation !Stem-Initial !Stem-Final |
m̀bɔ̀ŋ
|"cow" |CCVC | |
m̀be᷅lə
|"ribs" |CCV |CV |
== Stem-Initial ==
Attested syllable shapes for stem-initial syllables include {{Transliteration|mij|italic=no|(C)CV(C)}}, with certain restrictions on where some consonants (such as glides and nasals) can appear within those syllables. Very few words begin with vowels in Mungbam; these are primarily restricted to lexical nouns, some pronouns, and some grammatical particles.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|pp=23–24}}
== Stem-Final ==
Non-stem initial syllables are exclusively CV in shape, almost entirely predictable in terms of tone, and have a very restricted set of possible consonants.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=24}}
Morphology
Affixation, typically the most common morphological process, is very minimal in Mungbam. Affixation is restricted primarily to prefixes, with semi-rare circumfixes, and few suffixes. Every affix is either derivational or concordant. Derivational affixation typically either nominalizes or adjectivalizes verbs. The most common concordant affixation is that of noun-class prefixes to word stems.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
= Verbs =
Verbs most often appear as just the stem, with no affixation at all. Each verb belongs to one of the three verb classes, which are distinct with respect to tone.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=186}} Most non-tonal verb inflection is done by tense markers, which denote the five temporal tenses, as well as a conditional tense. Tense markers are all words separate from the verb except the perfect marker, which is enclitic.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|pp=197–199}} Mungbam morphological inflection mainly comprises tone shift, reduplication, nominalization through affixation, and some rare cases of ablaut.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
== Tone Shift ==
Tonal inflection includes tone extension and tone sandhi.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
Tone extension denotes a change in verbal mood. The difference between realis and irrealis verbs corresponds, in part, to a difference between extended and unextended tones. Extension is a morphological process wherein the stem vowel of a noun is lengthened, changing the tone. Extension affects the relative height of each tone.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
class="wikitable"
|+Examples of Tone Extension{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=42}} !Realis !Irrealis !Gloss |
wù
|wu᷅ |'grind' |
wû
|wú |'wash.{{gcl|IPFV}}' |
wû
|wú |'ascend' |
Consecutive verbs in the Missong dialect can experience tone sandhi.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
class="wikitable"
|+Example of Tone Sandhi{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=91}} |tse᷅ |'go!' |
wɔ᷅ŋ
|'squeeze (honey)!' |
tse᷅ wɔ̋ŋ
|'go and squeeze (honey)!' |
== Reduplication ==
Reduplication can either be inflectional or stylistic. Inflectional reduplication in Mungbam establishes verum focus.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=354}}
{{interlinear|indent=2|lang=jig
|Mə̄ lē dí jɛ̄ n̄-dʒ͡ú~dʒ͡ű
|1SG P3 (C)say.IRR COMP 1SG-VFOC~(B)fear
|'I said that I was afraid.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=354}}
}}
Stylistic reduplication is not very well attested, Lovegren found only two examples. It might create emphasis.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=197}}
== Nominalization ==
There are two processes which nominalize verbs: a productive, well-attested process to form infinitives, and a less productive, virtually un-attested process to create the “disability construction.”{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|pp=205–208}} Infinitives are formed by affixing a noun class prefix or, in rare cases, circumfix. Infinitives in Mungbam function as nouns do, but lack plurals. For more complicated verb phrases, the infinitive can be formed out of the entire phrase by attaching the noun-class prefix to the first verb in the phrase.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
class="wikitable"
|+Formation of Infinitives{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=206}} |gbē |'fall' |
ì-gbē
|'falling' |
There is an optional suffix that can be added for some infinitives in Biya.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=207}} For example, the Biya circumfix as applied to the verb ' tɕī,' ('look'):
class="wikitable"
|+Biya Circumfix{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=207}} |tɕī |
ì-tɕī-lə
|Infinitive |
The “disability” construction describes humans or animals who are ‘disabled.’{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=205}} Uniquely, it is the only construction where a noun may not have a noun-class prefix. It is a highly unproductive and uncommon construction.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
{{interlinear|indent=2|lang=jig
|ŋ̀-kə̀m -kûsə
|CL1.NMLZ2-break leg
|'amputee'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=209}}
}}
Here, the verb 'break' has been nominalized as part of the noun phrase 'broken leg' which translates more closely into 'amputee.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=209}}
== Ablaut ==
Verbs undergo ablaut to denote changes in aspect (perfective and imperfective). The productivity of ablaut varies across the dialects of Mungbam.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=190}}
class="wikitable"
|+Examples of Ablaut{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=190}} !Perfective Stem !Imperfective Stem !Gloss |
ti
|to |'come' |
le
|lɔ |'make' |
ki
|kju |'spit' |
= Nouns =
With some exceptions, each noun must have a noun-class prefix, but otherwise has little to no affixation.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
== Noun Class System ==
The most common form of affixation is that of the noun-class prefix. Mungbam, like many Bantoid languages, indicates agreement with a noun-class system. In such a system, each noun has a noun-class prefix, and other morphemes take on that prefix when they agree with that noun. Unlike Indo-European systems, noun-class can be linked to number, gender, or abstraction (i.e., the plural form of a noun may belong to one class, while the singular form belongs to another class). Tone is related, but not entirely connected to, noun-class. The tone of the noun-class prefix will often, but not always, follow the tone of the stem.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
class="wikitable"
|+Examples of Noun-Class Prefixes{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=111}} !Noun !Gloss !Noun-Class !Noun |
ú-kpe̋
|'{{gcl|CL3}}.house' |3 |House |
à-kə̂fə
|'{{gcl|CL7}}/{{gcl|CL12}}.bone' |7 or 12 |Bone |
ì-bé
|'{{gcl|CL9}}.goat' |9 |Goat |
There are some exceptions to the noun-class system, both within a dialect and among the five dialects. For example, the 7/8 noun-class pairing is found only in Missong, all nouns in those two classes are paired with other classes in the other dialects.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=121}}
=== Plurality ===
Nouns in certain noun classes will have their plural forms in specific other noun classes. For example, nouns in Class 1 often have their plural forms in Class 2. Singular/plural noun-class pairings can be roughly grouped by type of noun (e.g., the class 1/2 singular/plural pairing contains mainly, but not exclusively, words referring to humans).{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=118-119}}
class="wikitable"
|+Some Noun-Class 1/2 Nouns{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=118-119}} !Singular !Translation !Plural !Translation |
-ŋ̀kpa᷄nə
|'clay dish' |bə̀-ŋkpa᷄nə |'clay dishes' |
-nám
|'husband' |bə́-nám |'husbands' |
-m̀bɔ̀ŋ
|'cow' |bə̀-m̀bɔ̀ŋ |'cows' |
ù-ndi᷅nə
|'woman' |bə̀-ndi᷅nə |'women' |
ù-nɛ̀
|'person' |bə̀-nɛ̀ |'people' |
== Concord ==
Concord refers to noun-class agreement within the noun-phrase. There are three means by which Mungbam achieves concord: prefixation, tonal stem change, segmental stem change. Tonal concord causes a shift in tone when nouns are a part of an associated noun phrase.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}} Prefixal concord is achieved by attaching the noun-class prefix of the head noun to the constituent morpheme within the noun phrase.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013}}
{{interlinear|indent=2|lang=jig
|m̀bɔ̀ŋ ù-gbe᷅-lə
|CL1.cow CL1-(A)fall-ADJ
|'Fallen cow'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=157}}
}}
== Possessive Lengthening ==
Possessive lengthening is a morphological process that occurs for nouns possessed, and found in most Mungbam dialects. It involves lengthening of the tone and, sometimes, the vowel, when the noun is next to a possessive pronoun or particle.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=83}}
class="wikitable"
|+Possessive Lengthening Example{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=84}} !Word !Gloss !Translation |
ú-wō
|'{{gcl|CL3}}-moon' |'moon' |
ú-woo᷄ mə̋
|'{{gcl|CL3}}-moon {{gcl|POSS}}.{{gcl|1S}}' |'my moon' |
Syntax
The basic word order of Mungbam is SVO.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=341}}
{{interlinear|indent=2|lang=jig
|ù ɕòa fə̀ ŋàŋ ú-gbɛ̂
|CL1 (A)loosen (A)off (A)stay.IPFV CL3-rope
|'He’s loosening the rope.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=291}}
}}
Mungbam must have a subject directly preceding the verb. When the lexical subject follows the verb, a particle known as a 'dummy subject' is placed before the verb.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=150}}
{{interlinear|indent=2|lang=jig
|à kə̀fə tɕà te̋ nâ wù
|DS (A)shout (A)pass (B)come mother CL1.DET
|'It was the woman who shouted the most.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=150}}
}}
Here, 'à' is glossed as the 'dummy subject,' and functions as a placeholder with no other meaning.
The ordering of constituents within the Mungbam noun phrase is as follows: Noun, associated noun phrase, possession and other modifier, adjective, number, demonstrative, relative clause, determiner.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=176}} While there are recorded exceptions for much of this ordering, associated noun phrases must come strictly after the head noun.
{{interlinear|indent=2|lang=jig
|múm-bûs mɔ̋ mūŋ-gbábə-tɕí mūm-fín mūn-dɮɛ̂n mū
|{{gcl|CL18}}a-cat 1SG.POSS {{gcl|CL18}}a-(B)strong-ADJ {{gcl|CL18}}a-two {{gcl|CL18}}a-DEM.DIST {{gcl|CL18}}a.DET
|'Those my two strong cats.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=176}}
}}
= Negation =
Sentences are typically negated by the addition of a particle towards the end of the sentence. While this addition may change the word order in transitive sentences, intransitive sentences always keep the SV word order.{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=420}}
{{interlinear|indent=2|lang=jig
|mə̄ mâki á kə̀m fànə dà
|1SG LOC.market NEG (A)again (A)sell {{gcl|D.NEG|‘d’ negative morpheme}}
|'I don't sell in the market anymore.'{{sfn|Lovegren|2013|p=420}}
}}
References
{{reflist|20em}}
= Bibliography =
{{refbegin}}
- {{cite book
|first1=Jeff |last1=Good
|first2=Jesse |last2=Lovegren
|first3=Jean Patrick |last3=Mve
|first4=Carine Nganguep |last4=Tchiemouo
|first5=Rebecca |last5=Voll
|first6=Pierpaolo |last6=Di Carlo
|year=2011
|chapter=The Languages of the Lower Fungom region of Cameroon
|title=The Languages of the Lower Fungom of Cameroon
|publisher=University of Buffalo
|chapter-url=http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~jcgood/goodetal-LowerFungom-Grammar.pdf
}}
- {{cite thesis
|first=Jesse Stuart James |last=Lovegren
|year=2013
|title=Mungbam Grammar
|type=PhD Dissertation
|publisher=University of Buffalo
|url=https://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~jcgood/Lovegren-2013-MungbamGrammar.pdf
}}
{{refend}}
Further reading
- Blench, Roger, 2011. [http://www.rogerblench.info/Language/Niger-Congo/Bantoid/General/Blench%20Bantu%20IV%20Berlin%20Bantoid%202011.pdf 'The membership and internal structure of Bantoid and the border with Bantu']. Bantu IV, Humboldt University, Berlin.
- Good, Jeff, & Jesse Lovegren. 2009. [http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~jcgood/goodlovegren-Bantu3.pdf 'Reassessing Western Beboid']. Bantu III.
- Good, Jeff, & Scott Farrar. 2008. [http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~jcgood/farrargood-WesternBeboidNCs.pdf 'Western Beboid and African language classification']. LSA.
External links
- [http://starling.rinet.ru/cgi-bin/response.cgi?root=new100&morpho=0&basename=new100\bco\beb&limit=-1 Abar and Missong basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database]
- ELAR archive of [http://elar.soas.ac.uk/deposit/0303 Ngun (a variety of Mungbam) language documentation materials]
{{Beboid languages}}