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Does Gokana really have syllables? A postscript*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2015

Larry M. Hyman*
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
*

Abstract

After years of searching for evidence for the syllable in Gokana, I presented a possible argument in Hyman (2011) that the prosodic stem consists at most of two bimoraic syllables. In this note I show that there is an alternative account not involving syllables. Either way, Gokana makes very little reference to syllable structure, if at all.

Type
Squibs and Replies
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

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Footnotes

*

I would like to thank three anonymous reviewers, the associate editor and the editors for their helpful, if not uncritical, responses to the original submission of this note.

References

Akinlabi, Akinbiyi & Urua, Eno E. (2003). Foot structure in the Ibibio verb. Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 24. 119160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyman, Larry M. (1985). A theory of phonological weight. Dordrecht: Foris. Reprinted 2003, Stanford: CSLI.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyman, Larry M. (2011). Does Gokana really have no syllables? Or: what's so great about being universal? Phonology 28. 5585.CrossRefGoogle Scholar