A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
Tooro | |
---|---|
Rutooro | |
Orutooro | |
Pronunciation | [oɾutóːɾo] |
Native to | Uganda |
Region | Tooro Kingdom |
Ethnicity | Batooro |
Native speakers | (490,000 cited 1991 census)[1] |
Standard forms | |
Dialects |
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ttj |
Glottolog | toor1238 |
JE.12 [2] |
Tooro | |
---|---|
Person | Omutooro |
People | Abatooro |
Language | Orutooro |
Country | Obukama bwa Tooro |
Tooro (/tɔːroʊ/) or Rutooro (/ruːˈtɔːroʊ/, Orutooro, IPA: [oɾutóːɾo]) is a Bantu language spoken mainly by the Tooro people (Abatooro) from the Tooro Kingdom in western Uganda. There are three main areas where Tooro as a language is mainly used: Kabarole District, Kyenjojo District and Kyegegwa District. Tooro is unique among Bantu languages as it lacks lexical tone.[3] It is most closely related to Runyoro.
Phonology
Vowels
Tooro has 5 short vowels and 5 corresponding long vowels. It also has 3 diphthongs.
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
Close | i[a][b] | u[a] |
Close-mid | e | o |
Open | a |
Nasal vowels
Vowels followed by a nasal cluster tend to be nasalised, even to the point that the nasal consonant is barely heard (e.g. Abakonjo "Konjo people").[5]: xiv
Vowel lengthening
Vowels can be lengthened in these contexts:[5]: xv–xvii
- Compensatory lengthening as a result of glide formation (e.g. o-mu-ána → "child")
- If the second vowel is not high-toned but part of a noun phrase, the second vowel is half-lengthened (e.g. o-mu-ana wange → "my child"
- A high-toned vowel comes before a consonant cluster where the first consonant is nasal (e.g. omugongo "back").
- If the high-toned vowel follows a consonant cluster, the vowel is not lengthened (e.g. "(unit of) nine").
- If the vowel is not high-toned but part of a noun phrase, the second vowel is half-lengthened (e.g. omugongo gumu "one back")
- A word follows the structure VCV (where C = consonant and V = vowel) and the first vowel has a high tone (e.g. enu "this (class 9)")
- If the word follows the structure (C)VCVCV and the second vowel has a high tone, the first vowel is half-lengthened (e.g. omubu "mosquito"
- Two identical vowels near each other (e.g. a-ba-ana → "children")
- Two underlying consecutive vowels where one of them is not seen on the surface due to vowel elision (the first vowel is dropped) (e.g. ni-a-kir-a → "he/she is becoming cured")
- The lengthening does not apply to the negative element ti-, but the dropping does (e.g. ti-o-kozire → "you (sg.) have not worked")
- Imbrication, specifically where two -ir suffixes are next to each other and the first /ɾ/ is dropped (e.g. n-jwah-ir-ire → "I am tired in a way")
- A vowel comes before two consecutive nasal consonants (e.g. oku-n-noba → "to dislike me (inf.)
Vowel shortening
Word-final long vowels are shortened, except if they are in the penultimate syllable of a noun phrase. As a result, the inherently long final vowel in obuso "forehead" and the phonetically long final vowel in omutwe "head" are shortened in isolation but are lengthened after a monosyllabic qualifier (obuso bwe "his/her forehead"; omutwe gwe "his/her head").[5]: xiv
Diphthongs
Tooro has 3 diphthongs, /ai/, /oi/ and /au/, the latter only being attested in 3 words, 2 being English loanwords (autu "vegetable cooking oil", etauni < Eng. "town", etaulo < Eng. "towel").[5]: xviii In some dialects, /ai/ is pronounced as .[citation needed]
Vowel hiatus resolutionedit
Tooro has different ways of resolving vowel hiatus in individual words or in between words:[4]
- If the first vowel is /a/ or /o/ and the second vowel is /i/, diphthongisation occurs (e.g. ba-it-a → baita βáíta "they kill").
- If the first vowel is /e/ and the second vowel is /i/, /e/ is dropped and causes compensatory lengthening in /i/, although it is not always as such (e.g. o-ku-se-is-a → okusiisa okusíːsa "to cause to grind").
- If the first vowel is a non-close vowel and follows a consonant, and if the second vowel is not /i/, the first vowel is dropped and causes compensatory lengthening (e.g. ba-et-a → beeta "they invite").
- If the first vowel is a non-close vowel and does not follow a consonant, and if the second vowel is not /i/, /j/ is epenthetically inserted in the middle of the vowels (e.g. a-et-a → ayeta "he/she invites").
- This can occur multiple times in the same word (e.g. o-e-et-a → oyeyeta "you (sg) invite yourself")
- This does not occur if the first vowel is before the tense-aspect-mood affix /-a-/ or the refiexive affix /-e-/ in the subjunctive mood, in which case it glides (e.g. o-a-ka-hik-a → wakahika "you (sg) just arrived", a-e-ror-e → yerole "may he/she see him/herself")
Mid vowel harmonyedit
Some suffixes that are added to verbs exhibit mid vowel harmony, where the vowel in the suffix (/i/ or /u/) is lowered to a mid vowel (/e/ or /o/ respectively) if the vowel in the ultimate syllable of the verb root is a mid vowel (e.g. okucumbira "to cook for someone"; okusekera "to laugh for someone"). Mid vowel harmony does not apply if consonant mutation to the verb root also applies, instead only the consonant mutation in the verb root applies (e.g. ngenzire (from the root √-gend-) "I went (and the effect remains)" instead of *ngenzere).[6]
Consonantsedit
Bilabial | Labio-dental | Alveolar | Post-alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plosive | p b[a] | t d[b] | k[c] g | ||||
Affricate | tʃ dʒ | ||||||
Fricative | β | f v | s z | h[d] | |||
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ[e] | |||
Tap | ɾ | ||||||
Trill | r[f] | ||||||
Approximant | l[g] | j | w |
- ^ /b/ is mostly used in foreign loanwords and as a post-nasal allophone of /β/.
- ^ /d/ is mostly an allophone of /ɾ/ after a nasal consonant.
- ^ /k/ can optionally be palatalised as c before /i/ or /j/ (e.g. kyange cáŋge).[5]
- ^ /h/ becomes /p/ after a nasal consonant. /hj/ is often pronounced ç or ʃ.
- ^ ŋ is an allophone of /n/ before /g/.
- ^ /r/ is the result of a vowel dropped between two /ɾ/ sounds (e.g. omurro < omuriro "fire"). This vowel-dropping does not happen if the second /ɾ/ is followed by a semivowel (/j, w/).[5]
- ^ l is an allophone of /ɾ/ word-initially before /e, i/ or after /a, o, u/ and before /e, i/ (as in aliire "he/she has eaten"). /l, r/ also becomes /d/ before a nasal (as in n-li → ndi ń̩di "I am").
Consonant mutationedit
Certain suffixes, specifically the perfective -ir (not to be confused with the applicative -ir), the nominalizer -i, the short causative -i, and the long causative -is cause the consonant before it to be mutated.[6]
The first two suffixes mutate /ɾ, d͡ʒ/ or d to z and /t/ to s (e.g. barubasire "they have walked" < √-rubat- "to walk"; omubaizi "carpenter < √-baij- "to do carpentry"). However, perfective -ir mutates /d͡ʒ/ to z inconsistently (e.g. baizire "they have come" < √-ij- "to come"; bahiijire "they have panted" < √-hiij- "to pant"), and most of the time, it can be used with or without mutation (e.g. babaijire ~ babaizire "they have done carpentry" < √-baij-). The distinction between the perfective and applicative -ir is important as the applicative -ir cannot cause mutation (e.g. okurubatira "to walk for" < okurubata "to walk"). Additionally, only the unmutated perfective -ir can cause mutation, as the mutated form, -iz, cannot cause mutation (e.g. beereze "they have cleaned < √-eer "to clean" instead of *beezize).[6]
Causative -i also mutates /ɾ/ or d to z and t to s (no instance has been found of causative -i mutating /d͡ʒ/). Since the /zj/ and /sj/ clusters are not permitted in Tooro"s phonotactics, the /j/ is dropped (e.g. okukwasa "to make touch" < *okukwasya < okukwata "to touch").[6]
Finally, causative -is only mutates /ɾ/ to z (e.g. okuhazisa "to cause to scratch" < okuhara "to scratch"). It cannot mutate /d͡ʒ/, d or /t/ (e.g. okutundisa "to cause to sell" < okutunda "to sell" instead of *okutunzisa).[6]
Toneedit
Tooro has 2 main tones (high and low, low tone being the default), and 2 other tones (falling and rising) that appear in restricted circumstances. It is worth mentioning that vowels and nasal consonants can have a high tone (e.g. nnywa ń̩ɲwa "I drink").
High toneedit
Although Tooro lacks lexical tone, it has grammatical tone in the form of the high tone. In isolation, the high tone always falls on the penultimate syllable of a word, however, when a noun is modified by a following disyllabic adjective, the noun loses its high tone except if the noun functions as a predicate. -ona "all, whole" and -ombi "both" are exceptions to this, as they let the noun keep its high tone. Additionally, a noun followed by a monosyllabic adjective makes the high tone fall on the last syllable of the noun. An adjective with more than two syllables morphologically lets the noun keep its high tone. This means that ondi "the other (person, class 1)" & endi "the other (class 9)" are considered trisyllabic as they are derived from o-o-ndi/e-e-ndi and overlong vowels are not permissible. Thus, the only difference between omuːntu óːndi "another person" and omúːntu óːndi "the other person" is the high tone of the noun.[3] Demonstratives also let the noun keep its high tone, regardless if the demonstrative has only 1 or 2 syllables.
- omutwe omútwe "head"
- omutwe gwe omutwéː gwe "his/her head"
- omutwe gwange omutwe gwáːŋge "my head, any of my heads"
- Omutwe gwange. omútwe gwáːŋge "The head is mine."
- omutwe ogwange omútʷ‿ogwáːŋge "my own head"
- omutwe murungi omútwe murúːŋgi "a good head"
- omutwe gunu omútwe gúnu "this head"
- omutwe gwona omútwe gwóːna "the/a whole head"
Falling toneedit
A falling tone appears in two cases:
- When the final two syllables of a word follow the structure CVɾV (where C = consonant and V = vowel), especially when the first vowel is a non-close vowel. (e.g. okukora okukôɾa "to work")
- In the penultimate syllable, where the following syllable begins with /j/ (e.g. rediyo redîjo < Eng. radio)
Rising toneedit
Rising tone is very rare, and only occurs in one case where a monosyllabic noun stem which has no noun prefix is used without an augment word-finally (e.g. enu ka eːnǔ ka "this is a house").
Phonotacticsedit
The following syllable types are allowed in native Tooro words, where V stands for a vowel (short or long), C a consonant, N a nasal consonant, and G a glide.
- V (e.g. ina íːna "four (class 10)"): this syllable type is only allowed word-initially.
- CV (e.g. ina íːna "four (class 10)")
- N (e.g. ndi ń̩di "I am"): this syllable type is also only allowed word initially.
- NCV (e.g. endiisa endíːsa "honeyguide")
- Note that C (consonant) includes other nasal consonants, thus tinnyagire tiːɲaɡíɾe "I did not kidnap" is permissible.
- CGV (e.g. enwa éːnwa "wasps")
- NCGV (e.g. embwa éːmbwa "dog")
- Note that C (consonant) includes other nasal consonants, thus tinnywire tiːɲwíɾe "I did not drink" is permissible.
Note that since these rules only apply to native Tooro words, loanwords like Kristo "Christ" may break them.
Orthographyedit
Tooro uses the same orthography as Nyoro.
a | aa | b | bb | c | d | e | ee | f | g | h | i | ii | j | k | l |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
/a/ | /aː/ | /β/ | /b/ | /tʃ/ | /d/ | /e/ | /eː/ | /f/ | /g/ | /h/ | /i/ | /iː/ | /dʒ/ | /k/ | /l/ |
m | n[a] | ny[b] | o | oo | p | r | rr | s | t | u | uu | v | w | y | z |
/m/ | /n/ | /ɲ/ | /o/ | /oː/ | /p/ | /ɾ/ | /r/ | /s/ | /t/ | /u/ | /uː/ | /v/ | ?pojem= | /j/ | /z/ |
Vowel hiatus resolution between words is not indicated in the orthography, except for some short words like na "and", -a "of" or nka "approximately" (e.g. okusoma ekitabu okusóm‿eːkitáβu "to read a book"; ky'abantu c‿aβáːntu "of (class 7) the people"). Doubled vowels are not used in environments where vowel lengthening can be easily predicted (e.g. in a penultimate syllable before a nasal cluster). Tone is not represented in the orthography.
Grammaredit
Noun classesedit
Like most Bantu languages, Tooro has noun classes, shown in the table below (augment vowels in brackets).