Gokana language

Ogoni language of Nigeria
Gokana
Native toNigeria
RegionGokana, Rivers State
Native speakers
(100,000 cited 1989)[1]
Language family
Niger–Congo?
Language codes
ISO 639-3gkn
Glottologgoka1239

Gokana (Gòkánà) is an Ogoni language spoken by some 130,000 people in Rivers State, Nigeria.

Phonology

Gokana has been argued to lack syllables, a radical claim because syllables are traditionally considered to be universal. According to Hyman (1983), Gokana "does not organise its consonants and vowels into syllables." Hyman later amended his claim to say that "the syllable plays at best a minor role in the prosodic organisation of Gokana" and is perhaps not activated to express any generalisations in the language.[2]

Writing system

Gokana alphabet
Uppercase letters A B D E F G Gb Gy I K Kp Ky L M N Ng Nv Ny O P S T V Z
Lowercase letters a b d e f g gb gy i k kp ky l m n ng nv ny o p s t v z

Nasal vowels are indicated by a tilde and tones are indicated by an acute or grave accent:

  • The high tone is indicated by an acute accent : á, ã́, é, ẹ́, ẽ́, í, ĩ́, ó, ọ́, ṍ, ú, ṹ, ḿ ;
  • The low tone is indicated by a grave accent  : à, ã̀, è, ẹ̀, ẽ̀, ì, ĩ̀, ò, ọ̀, õ̀, ù, ũ̀, m̀ ;
  • The middle tone is indicated with no diacritic.

References

  1. ^ Gokana at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Hyman, Larry (May 2011). "Does Gokana really have no syllables? Or: what's so great about being universal?". Phonology. 28 (1): 55–57. doi:10.1017/S0952675711000030. S2CID 31005113.
  • "A global linguistic database:Gokana" Tower of Babel Project
  • Brosnahan, L. F. (1964) "Outlines of the Phonology of the Gokana Dialect of Ogoni" Journal of West African Languages 1(1): pp. 43–48
  • Brosnahan, L. F. (1967) "A Word List of the Gokana Dialect of Ogoni" Journal of West African Languages 4(2): pp. 43–52
  • Hyman, Larry M. and Comrie, B. (1981) "Logophoric Reference in Gokana" Journal of African Languages and Linguistics (Leiden) 3(1): pp. 19–37
  • Hyman, Larry M. (1982) "The representation of nasality in Gokana" In Hulst, Harry, van der and Smith, Norval (eds.) (1982) The Structure of Phonological Representations part, 1 Foris Publishing, Dordrecht, Holland, ISBN 90-70176-53-X
  • Yan Huang (2003) "Switch-reference in Amele and logophoric verbal suffix in Gokana: a generalized neo-Gricean pragmatic analysis" In Georgiafentis, M.; Haeberli, E, and Varlokosta, S. (eds.) (2003) Reading Working Papers in Linguistics Volume 7, pp. 53–76, School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies, University of Reading, Reading, UK
  • Bond, Oliver and Anderson, Gregory D. S. (2005) "Divergent Structure in Ogonoid Languages" In (2005) Proceedings of the Berkeley Linguistic Society Volume 31, Berkeley Linguistic Society, Berkeley, California
  • v
  • t
  • e
Languages of Nigeria
Official languagesNational languagesRecognised languagesIndigenous languages
Indigenous languages (grouped by Nigerian state)
Adamawa
Akwa Ibom
Bauchi
Bayelsa
Benue
Borno
Cross River
Delta
Edo
Gombe
Jigawa
Kaduna
Kano
Kebbi
Kogi
Kwara
Nasarawa
Niger
Ondo
Plateau
Rivers
Taraba
Yobe
Sign languagesImmigrant languagesScripts


This article about Cross River languages is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e