akan and the kwa languages charles marfo the university of hong kong [email protected]

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Akan Akan and the Kwa Languages and the Kwa Languages Charles Marfo Charles Marfo The University of Hong Kong [email protected]

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Akan Akan and the Kwa Languagesand the Kwa Languages

Charles MarfoCharles Marfo

The University of Hong [email protected]

Akan and the Kwa LanguagesAkan and the Kwa Languages

1. Location and classification:1. Location and classification:

– Akan and the Kwa languages are situated in the West African sub-region.

– They cover countries such Ghana, Côte d'Ivoire, Togo, Benin, Liberia, and Nigeria.

– They are members of the Niger-Congo language family

Location of the Kwa family of languages

Down to the Tano subgroup, the biggest subgroup is Akan.

We focus on the Akan subgroup.

The Akan LanguagesThe Akan Languages

There are several languages in AkanAkan..

The major ones spoken in GhanaGhana are:– Fante,– Akuapim and – Asante.

They are spoken They are spoken around around the central, western and southern parts of Ghana.

2. Some facts about Akan2. Some facts about Akan

a. Asante and Akuapim are also referred to as Twi.

b. So Akuapim and Asante are also often respectively called Akuapim-Twi and Asante-Twi.

c. Fante, Akuapim and Asante are largely mutually intelligible; i.e., speakers of the languages understand each other.

d. They may be typologically similar or different:

• i.e., phonological, morphological, and syntactic features

I. PhonologyI. Phonology

In the languages:

There are more consonants than vowels. There is syllabic nasal usage; i.e. /N/. There is also tone representation.

i. Consonants:i. Consonants:– Some consonants are palatalized or labialized.

E.g. /ky/ in ‘to show’ and /dw/ in dwene ‘to think’

– There are limited cases of free variation.E.g. /d/, /r/ and /l/ in the word, / / ‘a child’

ii. Vowels:ii. Vowels:– There is the feature of vowel harmony (based

on Advanced Tongue Root (ATR)).

With VH, the vowels are divided into two sets; i.e.,

– +ATR () and – –ATR ()

Vowels from one set appear in a word.E.g. ‘machine’ ‘what is vomitted’

– There is also the feature of vowel harmony (based on rounding) in Fante.E.g. mE-rE- ‘I-Prog’ in me-re-dzi ‘I’m eating’ and

mo-ro-ko ‘I’m fighting’.

iii.iii. Syllabic nasality:Syllabic nasality: – This is a typological feature in the

languages.

– Syllabic nasals are often realized as plural markers in nouns and negative markers in verbs. E.g.:

/N/ indicates plural number in some nouns, ‘children’ (‘a child’) and ‘marbles’ ( ‘a marble’)

/N/ also indicates negation in verbs, ‘don’t take’ ( ‘take’ ) and ‘don’t cook’ ( ‘cook’)

iv. Tone:iv. Tone:– Akan languages are tone languages.

– They are primarily two-toned with cases of downstep (H).

– tones express both lexical and grammatical oppositions. Examples are:

in the nouns, ‘father’ and ‘goodness’

in the declarative and hortative readings of pronouns e.g. K ‘Kofi does not talk.’

K ‘Kofi should talk.’

v. Syllable structure:v. Syllable structure:– Asante always manifests open syllables,

but Fante and Akuapim may have close syllables.

E.g. Fante/Akuapim ‘to read’

Asante ‘to read’

– Other close syllables are reconstructed into an open syllable in Asante.

e.g. (V.CVC) ‘the head’ in Fante

becomes (V.CV.CV) in Asante.

II. MorphologyII. Morphology::i. Noun classes:– Most nouns exist in three forms:

the root, the singular, and the plural.

E.g. in the word for woman / wife:

- (root), (singular), (plural)

– In this example the singular/plural prefixes are - / n-.

– All nouns that exhibit this (- / n-) pattern are categorized into one class.

ii. Verb morphology:– In all the Akan languages, there is a regular

form of marking aspects by affixes; e.g., perfective and progressive by prefixes on the verbs.

– The perfective and progressive prefixes regularly respond to the vowel harmony feature, since the feature operates regressively.

E.g. K--‘Kofi has rested.’K--‘Kofi has jumped.’

– The verb is negated by a syllabic nasal prefix, homorganic to the stem-initial consonant.

N- ‘don’t go’ N-fa ‘don’t fight’

III. SyntaxIII. Syntax::i. Word order:– All the Akan languages exhibit the Subject

Verb Object order in their basic sentence patterns.

ii. Verb serialization:– A syntactic construction in which two or

more lexical verbs may share arguments without intervening connectors.

Examples in Akan (Asante)i.

3sg. take cloth give 1sg.‘S/he bought a cloth for me.’

ii. 3sg Prog.cook eat ‘S/he is cooking to eat.’

4. Conclusion4. Conclusion

Most of these languages are being used for educational purposes in the central, western and southern parts of Ghana.

There are serious attempts at functional literacy and mass communication in all these indigenous languages.

Gradually, awareness is being raised about the importance of the mother tongues as important languages of mass communication for socio-economic development in this part of West Africa.

Further ReadingFurther Reading

Abakah, E.N. 1999. On the question of standard Fante. Journal of West African Languages 27(1): 95-115.Acquaah, G.R.  1968.  A Brief Ghana History in Fante Verse.  Cape Coast:  Methodist Book Depot.Berry, J. and A. Aidoo.  1975.  An Introduction to Akan.  Evanston, IL.: Northwestern Christaller, J.G. 1967.  A Grammar of the Asante and Fante Language, Called Tshi [Chwee, Twi]. Ridgewood, NJ:Dolphyne, F. A.  1988.  The Akan (Twi-Fante) Language: Its Sound Structure and Tonal Structure. University of Ghana Press.Welmers, W.E.  1946. A Descriptive Grammar of Fanti. Baltimore: Linguistic Society of America. Pp. 78.

Thank you!Thank you!