TABLE
OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE:
1.0 Introduction
1.1 General Background
1.2 Historical Background of Gunganchi People
1.3 Sociocultural Background or Profile of the
Gunganchi People
1.4 Genetic Classification of Gunganchi
1.5 Scope and Organization of Study
1.6 Data Collection
1.7 Data Analysis
1.8 Review of the chosen Theoretical Framework
CHAPTER TWO: BASIC
PHONOLOGICAL CONCEPTS
2.0 Introduction
2.1 Phonology
2.2 Sound Inventory of Gunganchi
2.3 Phonological Description of Gunganchi
Consonants and their Distribution
2.4 Vowels
2.5 Distribution of Vowels
2.6 Distribution of Nasalized Vowels
2.7 Tonal Inventory
2.8 Syllable Inventory
2.9 Distinctive Features
CHAPTER THREE:
PHONOLOGICAL PROCESSES IN GUNGANCHI
3.0 Introduction
3.1 Phonological Processes
CHAPTER FOUR: TONAL
PROCESSES AND SYLLABLE PROCESSES
4.0 Introduction
4.1 Tone System in Gunganchi
4.2 Functions of Tone in Gunganchi
4.3 Tonal
Processes
4.4 Syllable Structure
4.5 Syllable Structure Rule in Gunganchi
CHAPTER FIVE:
SUMMARY, FINDINGS/OBSERVATIONS, RECOMMENDATIONS AND CONCLUSION
5.0 Summary
5.1 Finding/Observations
5.2 Recommendations
5.3 Conclusion
References
CHAPTER
ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
This chapter is aimed
at discussing the case study of the Gungawa people who speak Gunganchi
language. It will note their general background, historical background,
sociocultural profile, the genetic classification of Gunganchi language. This
chapter will also discuss the scope and organization of study, the chosen
theoretical framework, data collection, and the data analysis for this project
work.
1.1 GENERAL BACKGROUND
The Gunganchi people
are a tribe that are also called the “Bareshe” people by their Hausa neighbours
which means “Island Dwellers”, it was told they were given this name due to
their closeness to lakes and rivers. Among themselves, they are commonly called
“Gungawa, Tsureja, Bareshe or Yaurawa” people. Their language has different
names like: Gunganchi, Tsureshe, Gunga or Tsureja and the name given to their
land is either Reshe or Gungu.
The present Gunganchi
people are the tribe who fled to the nearby Island of Niger in the mid
nineteenth century and eventually settled in a new site called Gungu or Yelwa.
The Gunganchi people are said to be the original inhabitants of Yauri.
During the British
regime, the state of Yauri as an emirate and the state of Yelwa as the seat of
the Emir of Yauri confirmed that both Yauri and Yelwa became Hausarized as a
result of their contact with the Hausa people. Today, the Yauri people speak
mostly Hausa language.
The Gunganchi people
lived in islets (very small islands) and shores of the Niger above Bussa until
the creation of Kainji Lake in 1974 which disrupted their settlement and their
living outside Kebbi State.
1.2 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF GUNGANCHI PEOPLE
According to oral
history, the Gunganchi people has different histories that has been narrated which
associated with their origin that will be discussed below.
In the nineteenth
century, a descendant of a warrior called ‘kasira’ who is also known as
‘Kachin’ allied with the Hausa soldiers to conquer the territory in the extreme
North who later settled with his co-fighters in the present Yauri town.
A native speaker of
Gunganchi who is known as “Agmalafiya” believe that the Gunganchi people came
from Kabbawa. He said they were hunters from Katsina State and further
explained that some people said the Gunganchi people are from the other Yauri’s
ethnic groups which are Shangawa, Kambari, Kabbawa or Sarkawa, Dukawa etc.
Another history told
us of their trace to the Songhai warriors who came from Mali to seek
territorial control and they eventually settled in Yauri and parts of Lopa and
Laru (Gunganchi’s neighbouring areas).
From the histories
narrated above, it is obvious that the Gunganchi people has no specific history
concerning their origin. They are divergent in their historical roots.
1.2.1 Population
The Gunganchi people
were about forty to sixty thousand in 1993. About thrity-five percent lived
outside Yauri Local Government in Kebbi State, sixty percent lived in Yauri
town, nine percent in Kotangora, Bussa and Borgu Local Government and one
percent in Kiama Local Government Area in Kwara State.
Back to 1990, the
population of the speakers in Yauri were referred to as Yaurawa or Reshewa in
Hausa language. According to Agmalafiya who was
mentioned earlier, the Gunganchi people were called Yaurawa by Queen
Amina of Zaria but generally called Gungawa among the Gunganchi in Diaspora and
sometimes call themselves Bareshe, which is the plural, or Ureshe, which is the
singular.
1.3 SOCIOCULTURAL BACKGROUND OR PROFILE OF
THE GUNGANCHI PEOPLE
According to the
Oxford Advanced Leaner’s Dictionary, culture is the way of life, the customs
and beliefs, art and social organization of a particular country or group.
The Gunganchi people
have a social and cultural profile that is similar to that of their
neighbouring ethnic group, Hausa. It is said that their lifestyle is centered
on the Emirate’s system. The Gunganchi people have their sociocultural beliefs
which are expressed in their culture, mode of dressing, occupation, religion,
festivals, marriage system, naming ceremony, burial ceremony, their education
system and political administration.
1.3.1 Culture
The Bareshe
(Gunganchi) people are highly cultured which reflect in their mode of dressing,
greetings, occupation and body adornment like decorating the woman’s legs with
tattoos and heavy tribal marks on her face during the wedding ceremony.
1.3.2 Mode of Dressing
The Gunganchi
people’s mode of dressing in the olden days is different from their dressing in
these modern days. In the olden days, they used to dress in animal skin, while
in these modern days, they dress in ‘Banbariga’ which is the traditional dress
for men while the women dress in loose covered clothing with a local embroidery
scarf which is tied around the woman’s body to wade off the sun. They are
mostly dressed in loose robe for relaxation.
1.3.3 Occupation
The Gunganchi people
are mostly farmers and fishermen. Their major crops are guinea corn, beans,
rice, and onions while the fishing equipment which is a fish cage is called
‘Suru’ and ‘Hauwuya’ in Gunganchi language. The people are also known for their
canoe and mat making.
1.3.4 Religion
The Gunganchi people
are mostly Muslims and few traditional worshippers and very little Christians.
1.3.5 Festivals
The festivals done in
Gunganchi are called ‘Anipo’ festival and ‘Idembe’. Festival. The blood of
animals like goat or bushmeat is used as sacrifices to their gods during the
festival.
During the festival,
a round seat is created by the people when eating. Such sittings are also
formed at events like wedding, naming ceremony, sallah festival and at
relaxation joints.
1.3.6 Marriage System
of the Gunganchi People
The Gunganchi has a
distinct way by which marriage is done. It shows a lazy man cannot marry any
Gunganchi lady because marriage is said to be a bit difficult most especially
for the men. Firstly, a man must inform his parents if he is in love with a
lady. Then, the man’s parents must make their son’s interest known to the
lady’s parents.
He will then farm for
the lady’s family he intends to marry from before giving their consent. The
farming duration is not specified, the man is said to stop the farming when
lady’s father is satisfied and the final consent will be given to the man’s
family. The lady’s family will then inform his relatives formally about their
daughter’s courtship with the man before the wedding date is chosen.
According to Muauzu,
the marriage or engagement ceremony is based on Islamic rites whereby the bride
price (Zadaki) will be paid. The bride will be decorated with tattoos on her
legs and heavy tribal marks on her face.
Foods eaten at the
ceremony are guinea corn pap, which is served in the morning and rice with fish
soup and burukutu is served at dusk. Their sitting position is related to that
of the festival’s as mentioned earlier they sit round a dish of guinea corn pap
on a mat, their sitting culture is the same with the Hausas. Hence, the
Gunganchi people inter marry with the Hausas.
1.3.7 Naming Ceremony
The Gunganchi do
their naming ceremony seven days after the child’s birth and its hair will be
shaved. Rice or guinea corn pap is served at the ceremony with people sitting
round the food. Therefore, the child will be circumcised after ten years.
1.3.8 Burial Ceremony
Like most tribes, the
Gunganchi celebrate the death of aged person and mourn the death of a young
person. They investigate sudden or unusual death by consulting the oracle
called “Gigo” (true god) or “Ujigo” (a god of thunder and rain). The oracle
will make the spirit of the deceased to revenge for his or her death by killing
the person who is responsible for his or her death.
However, this
practice is peculiar to the local or extreme Gunganchi people.
1.3.9 Education System
The Gunganchi value
the Western education, they give education to both their male and female
children. They have schools; they also make use of their personal houses as
schools.
1.3.10 Political
Administration
The Gunganchi adopted
the system of their neighboring tribe (Hausa) which is the Emirate’s system
because it is a multi-ethnic area that consist Yelwa, Lopa, Yauri, Laru people
which co-exist with them. The Emir’s palace is situated in Yelwa, thus, the
Gunganchi are the first settlers in Yauri. The appointed Emir is the ruler of
all the ethnic groups under Yauri.
During the British
regime, recognition was given to the Yauri emirate and Gungu (Island) district
of the Yauri Local Government which are now the center of Reshe (Gunganchi) population. In the political
administration of the Gunganchi people, succession is not by hereditary because
the Emir must be appointed, despite the fact that a Gunganchi man was the first
Emir of Yauri. The Emir must have some qualities before he can be appointed, like;
he must be an elderly person, famous and respected among the ethnic groups made
up of Yauri.
When a new Emir is
appointed, turbaning will be done as a sign of leadership. The Emir rules the
territory with his local chiefs called “Sariki” in areas like Gungunsariki,
Banha, Rekubolo, Toro, Zamari, Jalubabu etc.
Presently, the Local
Government Chairman is responsible for the executive function of Yauri and
other governmental activities are executed by the Kebbi State Government.
However, most of the
Gunganchi people are bilingual, (they speak both Gunganchi and Hausa) but the
majority speaks Gunganchi at home especially the youths. Thus, the language of
the emirate is Hausa with high prestige.
1.4 GENETIC CLASSIFICATION OF GUNGANCHI
Genetic classification
is the sub-grouping of all relevant languages into genetic nodes (group of
languages in each of which one language is more closely related to the other in
that group than to any language outside the group). The basis for genetic
classification is the idea that group of languages that share certain systemic
resemblances have inherited those similarities from a common origin.
Thus, genetic
classification makes two statements. First, it affirms that certain languages
are infact related to each other (i.e. share a common ancestor). Second, it
specifies how the languages are interrelated in the form of a branching
diagram.
Gunganchi language
falls under the Niger-Kordofanian language family.
African Language
Afro-Asiatic Niger Kordofanian Nilo Saharan Khoisan
Mande New Benue Congo Atlantic Volta Congo Kordofanian
Oko Defoid Kainji Idomoid Edoid Wolof
Western Kainji
Eastern Kainji
Kamuku Kainji Lake Gunganchi (Gungawa) Kambari Bassa Lopa
1.5 SCOPE AND ORGANIZATION OF STUDY
This work is limited
to the aspects of the phonology of Gunganchi language and it is divided into
five chapters.
Chapter one deals
with the introductory part, which includes the general background, historical
background, sociocultural profile of Gunganchi people, genetic classification
of Gunganchi language, scope and organization of study, data collection, data
analysis and the review of the chosen theoretical framework.
Chapter two deals with the basic phonological
concepts that involves the sound inventory of Gunganchi language whereby the
tonal inventory and syllable inventory of the language of study shall be
discussed and the sound distributions which includes distinctive features.
Chapter three is
based on the phonological processes found in Gunganchi language. Then, chapter
four will focus on the tonal and syllable processes of Gunganchi language.
Chapter five will summarize and conclude the work.
1.6 DATA COLLECTION
In this research
work, the method used for our data collection is the direct translation method
from English language to the project language which is Gunganchi based on the
Ibadan 400 wordlist. There was a direct interview with the language helper,
thus, data elicitation was carried out with the wordlist recorded on audio
cassette.
Informant’s Data:
Name: Corporal Labbo Alkali
Occupation: Soldier
Age: 40 years
Religion: Muslim
Languages spoken
apart from Gunganchi: Hausa and
English
Number of years spent
in Reshe (Gunganchi): 20 years
1.7 DATA ANALYSIS
To ensure an accurate
data analysis in this research work, all the data collected were carefully and
correctly written, tone marked and transcribed. The data collected were used
according to how the native speaker used them without imposing any extra rules
or norms.
1.8 REVIEW OF THE CHOSEN THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
The framework adopted
for this research work is Generative Phonology, which was developed by Chomsky
and Halle in the early 1950s; it is a component of generative grammar. This
framework assigns the correct phonetic representations to ‘utterances’ in such
a way as to reflect a native speaker’s internalized grammar.
According to Oyebade
(2008: 9), Generative Phonology is a theory which is built on the insight of
taxonomic phonemics even while remodeling the focus of phonological analysis.
The major motivation for this theoretical framework was the clash between
theoretical assumptions and linguistic data under the theory of classical
(taxonomic) phonemics.
Generative phonology
took off at maximum speed in the 1960s, following the works of Chomsky and
Halle (published in 1968 as “Sound Pattern ofEnglish (SPE)”. This theory argues
that the taxonomic approach of classical phonemics was not adequate enough to
address appropriately the phenomenon of human speech.
The proponents of
this new school of phonology suggest that an adequate theory of phonology must
account for:
The phenomenon of
language acquisition
The puzzling fact
that man can still understand the speech of another even when this speech is
defective; and
The native speaker’s
intuition about the physical make-up of the speech of his language.
1.8.1 The Structure of Generative Phonology
Generative phonology
assumes three very crucial components: the underlyingrepresentation, the phonetic
representation and the rules which link the two together that is called the
phonological rules. These components will be reviewed below.
1.8.1.1 Underlying Representation
Oyebade (2008: 12)
assumes underlying representation to be an abstract representation existing in
the linguistic competence of the native speaker. The underlying representation
is the most basic form of a word before any phonological rules have been
applied to it.
Underlying
representation shows what a native speaker knows about the abstract underlying
phonology of the language. At this level, items with invariant meaning have
identical representation. The underlying representation is also known as “the
phonological representation”, thus, the ability (competence) of a native
speaker to compute a sentence is referred to as the phonological representation
and this competence can be scientifically investigated.
There is an
assumption of an underlying level where there is a one-to-one correspondence
between form and meaning and which is exactly the same from one competent
speaker to another which explains the puzzling reaction of children in the
acquisition process. Since the child shares the same competence (and therefore
the same underlying representation) as the adult, it is reasonable to assume
that the child will expect the same output as the adult will expect. The child
may not be able to produce such an output since his production capability is
slower in the acquisition process than his competence.
The assumption of an underlying representation
which accounts for the rapid processing of defective input. Both interlocutors
have a shared competence which is accurate and invariant; the decoder part
participant thus has a prototype with which he can restructure the defective
utterance of the encoder.
Also, the underlying
representation has the property of being encoded in “distinctive features”
(these features will be discussed in the next chapter). This assumption is
motivated by the fact that language seems to target these features in making
its choices rather than segments.
1.8.1.2 The Phonetic
Representation
The phonetic
representation is the form of a word that is spoken and heard. It is also known
as “the surface level”. Phonological structure reflects the linguistic
competence of the native speaker to compute a phonetic representation for the
potentially infinite number of sentences generated by the syntactic component
of the grammar. We can say that there is no speaker of a language that has
heard all the sentences in his language but speaker has the ability to
understand any sentence heard.
Phonetic
representation indicates how the lexical item is to be realized in speech. It
is characterized by degree of narrowness such that, at the very least, any two
sounds that are distinguished in any human language are differently
represented.
Generative phonology
seems to consider this level as being trivial and not worth too much attention
except, perhaps as a source for the verification and justification of the
proposed underlying representation.
1.8.13 Phonological
Rules
Phonological rules
map underlying representation onto phonological representations. They delete,
insert, or change segments, or change the features of segments. They are said
to show the derivational sequence or path of an item in its journey from the
underlying level to the phonetic level. They must be able to capture the
phonological phenomenon in the simplest form. There are two types of rules in
phonological rules: feature changing rules and fill-in rules.
The featurechanging
rules change the features of the input to that of the output. However, the
other kind of rules called fill-in rules are rules, as the name implies, which
fill in empty slots.
Phonological rules
have to be precise in a scientific account of linguistic phenomena. It was
therefore suggested that the rules should have their own format. For instance,
a rule can say insert a high front vowel between a cluster of consonants and we
can have another rule which says insert a high front vowel after a word-final
consonant. These rules can be formalized thus:
Ø à i/C____C
Ø à i/C____#
As you can observe
from the formalization of the two rules, they are identical in input and output.
Furthermore, they have a lot of similarities in the environment. If the rules
are left like this, that is, as two separate rules, the implied claim will be
that these are two separate and distinct processes. This is intuitively
incorrect and it loses a linguistically significant generalization. These two
rules can then be collapsed into one and to capture the linguistically
significant fact that we are dealing with the same process. Thus (a) and (b)
can be combined as in (c) below:
C
Ø à i/C——
#
that is, a high front
vowel is inserted either between two consonants or after a consonant at word
final position.
In phonological
rules, notational devices are applied. They are conventions which make it
possible to combine distinct but related phonological rules in a single
statement; rules may be collapsed in this way only if they involve the same
process. In other words, notational devices are abbreviation conventions aimed
at reducing several rules into one. The purpose is to present more economically
the facts of language.
There are notational
devices like: brace notation ({}), angled bracket notation (<>), variable
features or alpha notation (a), multiple variable notation (a,b, Ɣ,
etc.). The role of these devices is to make it possible for the phonologists to
precisely and unambiguously state in rule form and the process that is taking
place in language when a pattern is observed. Secondly, it makes
linguistiscally significant generalizations and claims about the way language
works.
Finally, and perhaps
most trivially, it provides a shorthand abbreviatory method by which a complex
process can be captured as briefly as possible.