Pseudo-Reduplication in Lukisa Dialect
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Publication Date
2022Author
Oyoko Amos Maina, Atieno Jackline Okelo, Ogoti David Ongarora
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Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
: Reduplication is a grammatical aspect found in a wide range of African
languages and it is sometimes interchangeably used with repetition. Reduplication is
both a morphological and a phonological process of forming a compound word by
repeating all or part of the word. Morphological reduplication involves semantic
change through another word formation process while phonological reduplication is
where the copying pics the closest phonological input restricted to cases of
phonological necessity. Lukisa, a Luhya dialect is expected to exhibit a range of
patterns in reduplication which varies from a single segment being copied to an
entire phrase. Although linguistic forms of reduplication have been explored at
lexical and functional levels, there is need to validate morphological doubling
involving the creation of new stem type reduplication as a limitless linguistic
resource, a central meaning making strategy and a naturally integrated facility in
language. Therefore, the objective of this study is to establish how pseudo
reduplication manifests in Lukisa reduplication. Inkelas and Zoll (2005)
Morphological Doubling Theory was adopted for this study where morphology calls
twice for a constituent of a given semantic description with possible phonological
modification of either or both constituents. MDT is a native identity theory in the
sense that the surface phonological identity between the two copies occurs as a side
effect of semantic identity.