Hubbry Logo
Tone (linguistics)Tone (linguistics)Main
Open search
Tone (linguistics)
Community hub
Tone (linguistics)
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Tone (linguistics)
Tone (linguistics)
from Wikipedia

Six tones of Vietnamese
The syllable ma with each of the primary tones in Standard Chinese

Tone is the use of pitch in language to distinguish lexical or grammatical meaning—that is, to distinguish or to inflect words.[1] All oral languages use pitch to express emotional and other para-linguistic information and to convey emphasis, contrast and other such features in what is called intonation, but not all languages use tones to distinguish words or their inflections, analogously to consonants and vowels. Languages that have this feature are called tonal languages; the distinctive tone patterns of such a language are sometimes called tonemes,[2] by analogy with phoneme. Tonal languages are common in East and Southeast Asia, Africa, the Americas, and the Pacific.[1]

Tonal languages are different from pitch-accent languages in that tonal languages can have each syllable with an independent tone whilst pitch-accent languages may have one syllable in a word or morpheme that is more prominent than the others.

Mechanics

[edit]

Most languages use pitch as intonation to convey prosody and pragmatics, but this does not make them tonal languages.[3] In tonal languages, each syllable has an inherent pitch contour, and thus minimal pairs (or larger minimal sets) exist between syllables with the same segmental features (consonants and vowels) but different tones. Vietnamese and Chinese have heavily studied tone systems, as well as amongst their various dialects.

Below is a table of the six Vietnamese tones and their corresponding tone accent or diacritics:

Vietnamese tones ngang ("flat"), huyền ("deep" or "falling"), sắc ("sharp" or "rising"), nặng ("heavy" or "down"), hỏi ("asking"), and ngã ("tumbling")
Tone name Tone ID Vni/telex/Viqr Description Chao Tone Contour Diacritic Example
Northern Southern
ngang "flat" A1 [default] mid level ˧ (33) or ˦ (44) ma
huyền "deep" A2 2 / f / ` low falling (breathy) ˧˩ (31) or ˨˩ (21) ◌̀
sắc "sharp" B1 1 / s / ' mid rising, tense ˧˥ (35) or ˦˥ (45) ◌́
nặng "heavy" B2 5 / j / . mid falling, glottalized, heavy ˧ˀ˨ʔ (3ˀ2ʔ) or ˧ˀ˩ʔ (3ˀ1ʔ) ˩˨ (12) or ˨˩˨ (212) mạ
hỏi "asking" C1 3 / r / ? mid falling(-rising), emphasis ˧˩˧ (313) or ˧˨˧ (323) or ˧˩ (31) ˧˨˦ (324) or ˨˩˦ (214) ◌̉ mả
ngã "tumbling" C2 4 / x / ~ mid rising, glottalized ˧ˀ˥ (3ˀ5) or ˦ˀ˥ (4ˀ5) ◌̃

Mandarin Chinese, which has five tones, transcribed by letters with diacritics over vowels:

The tone contours of Standard Chinese. In the convention for Chinese, 1 is low and 5 is high. The corresponding tone letters are ˥ ˧˥ ˨˩˦ ˥˩.
  1. A high level tone: /á/ (pinyin ⟨ā⟩)
  2. A tone starting with mid pitch and rising to a high pitch: /ǎ/ (pinyin ⟨á⟩)
  3. A low tone with a slight fall (if there is no following syllable, it may start with a dip then rise to a high pitch): /à/ (pinyin ⟨ǎ⟩)
  4. A short, sharply falling tone, starting high and falling to the bottom of the speaker's vocal range: /â/ (pinyin ⟨à⟩)
  5. A neutral tone, with no specific contour, used on weak syllables; its pitch depends chiefly on the tone of the preceding syllable.

These tones combine with a syllable such as ma to produce different words. A minimal set based on ma are, in pinyin transcription:

  1. (/) 'mother'
  2. (/) 'hemp'
  3. (/) 'horse'
  4. (/) 'scold'
  5. ma (/) (an interrogative particle)

These may be combined into a tongue-twister:

Simplified: 妈妈骂马的麻吗?
Traditional: 媽媽罵馬的麻嗎?
Pinyin: Māma mà mǎde má ma?
IPA /máma màtə ma/
Translation: 'Is mom scolding the horse's hemp?'

See also one-syllable article.

A well-known tongue-twister in Standard Thai is:

ไหมใหม่ไหม้มั้ย
IPA: /mǎi̯ mài̯ mâi̯ mái̯/
Translation: 'Does new silk burn?'[a]

A Vietnamese tongue twister:

Bấy nay bây bầy bảy bẫy bậy.
IPA: [ɓʌ̌i̯ nai̯ ɓʌi̯ ɓʌ̂i̯ ɓa᷉i̯ ɓʌ̌ˀi̯ ɓʌ̂ˀi̯]
Translation: 'Recently, you've been setting up the seven traps incorrectly.'

A Cantonese tongue twister:

一人因一日引一刃一印而忍
Jyutping: jat1 jan4 jan1 jat1 jat6 jan5 jat1 jan6 jat1 jan3 ji4 jan2
IPA: [jɐ́t̚ jɐ̏n jɐ́n jɐ́t̚ jɐ̀t̚ jɐ᷅n jɐ́t̚ jɐ̀n jɐ́t̚ jɐn jȉː jɐ᷄n]
Translation: 'One person endures a day with one knife and one print.'

Tone is most frequently manifested on vowels, but in most tonal languages where voiced syllabic consonants occur they will bear tone as well. This is especially common with syllabic nasals, for example in many Bantu and Kru languages, but also occurs in Serbo-Croatian. It is also possible for lexically contrastive pitch (or tone) to span entire words or morphemes instead of manifesting on the syllable nucleus (vowels), which is the case in Punjabi.[4]

Tones can interact in complex ways through a process known as tone sandhi.

Phonation

[edit]

In a number of East Asian languages, tonal differences are closely intertwined with phonation differences. In Vietnamese, for example, the ngã and sắc tones are both high-rising but the former is distinguished by having glottalization in the middle. Similarly, the nặng and huyền tones are both low-falling, but the nặng tone is shorter and pronounced with creaky voice at the end, while the huyền tone is longer and often has breathy voice. In some languages, such as Burmese, pitch and phonation are so closely intertwined that the two are combined in a single phonological system, where neither can be considered without the other. The distinctions of such systems are termed registers. The tone register here should not be confused with register tone described in the next section.

Phonation type

[edit]

Gordon and Ladefoged established a continuum of phonation, where several types can be identified.[5]

Relationship with tone

[edit]

Kuang identified two types of phonation: pitch-dependent and pitch-independent.[6] Contrast of tones has long been thought of as differences in pitch height. However, several studies pointed out that tone is actually multidimensional. Contour, duration, and phonation may all contribute to the differentiation of tones. Investigations from the 2010s using perceptual experiments seem to suggest phonation counts as a perceptual cue.[6][7][8]

Tone and pitch accent

[edit]

Many languages use tone in a more limited way. In Japanese, fewer than half of the words have a drop in pitch; words contrast according to which syllable this drop follows. Such minimal systems are sometimes called pitch accent since they are reminiscent of stress accent languages, which typically allow one principal stressed syllable per word. However, there is debate over the definition of pitch accent and whether a coherent definition is even possible.[9]

Tone and intonation

[edit]

Both lexical or grammatical tone and prosodic intonation are cued by changes in pitch, as well as sometimes by changes in phonation. Lexical tone coexists with intonation, with the lexical changes of pitch like waves superimposed on larger swells. For example, Luksaneeyanawin (1993) describes three intonational patterns in Thai: falling (with semantics of "finality, closedness, and definiteness"), rising ("non-finality, openness and non-definiteness") and "convoluted" (contrariness, conflict and emphasis). The phonetic realization of these intonational patterns superimposed on the five lexical tones of Thai (in citation form) are as follows:[10]

Tone plus intonation in Thai
Falling
intonation
Rising
intonation
Convoluted
intonation
High level tone ˦˥˦ ˥ ˦˥˨
Mid level tone ˧˨ ˦ ˧˦˨
Low level tone ˨˩ ˧ ˧˧˦
Falling tone ˦˧˨, ˦˦˨ ˦˦˧, ˥˥˦ ˦˥˨
Rising tone ˩˩˦ ˧˧˦ ˨˩˦

With convoluted intonation, it appears that high and falling tone conflate, while the low tone with convoluted intonation has the same contour as rising tone with rising intonation.

Tonal polarity

[edit]

Languages with simple tone systems or pitch accent may have one or two syllables specified for tone, with the rest of the word taking a default tone. Such languages differ in which tone is marked and which is the default. In Navajo, for example, syllables have a low tone by default, whereas marked syllables have high tone. In the related language Sekani, however, the default is high tone, and marked syllables have low tone.[11] There are parallels with stress: English stressed syllables have a higher pitch than unstressed syllables.[12]

Types

[edit]

Register tones and contour tones

[edit]

In many Bantu languages, tones are distinguished by their pitch level relative to each other. In multisyllable words, a single tone may be carried by the entire word rather than a different tone on each syllable. Often, grammatical information, such as past versus present, "I" versus "you", or positive versus negative, is conveyed solely by tone.

In the most widely spoken tonal language, Mandarin Chinese, tones are distinguished by their distinctive shape, known as contour, with each tone having a different internal pattern of rising and falling pitch.[13] Many words, especially monosyllabic ones, are differentiated solely by tone. In a multisyllabic word, each syllable often carries its own tone. Unlike in Bantu systems, tone plays little role in the grammar of modern standard Chinese, though the tones descend from features in Old Chinese that had morphological significance (such as changing a verb to a noun or vice versa).

Most tonal languages have a combination of register and contour tones. Tone is typical of languages including Kra–Dai, Vietic, Sino-Tibetan, Afroasiatic, Khoisan, Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan languages. Most tonal languages combine both register and contour tones, such as Cantonese, which produces three varieties of contour tone at three different pitch levels,[14] and the Omotic (Afroasiatic) language Bench, which employs five level tones and one or two rising tones across levels.[15]

Most varieties of Chinese use contour tones, where the distinguishing feature of the tones are their shifts in pitch (that is, the pitch is a contour), such as rising, falling, dipping, or level. Most Bantu languages (except northwestern Bantu) on the other hand, have simpler tone systems usually with high, low and one or two contour tone (usually in long vowels). In such systems there is a default tone, usually low in a two-tone system or mid in a three-tone system, that is more common and less salient than other tones. There are also languages that combine relative-pitch and contour tones, such as many Kru languages and other Niger-Congo languages of West Africa.

Falling tones tend to fall further than rising tones rise; high–low tones are common, whereas low–high tones are quite rare. A language with contour tones will also generally have as many or more falling tones than rising tones. However, exceptions are not unheard of; Mpi, for example, has three level and three rising tones, but no falling tones.

Word tones and syllable tones

[edit]

Another difference between tonal languages is whether the tones apply independently to each syllable or to the word as a whole. In Cantonese, Thai, and Kru languages, each syllable may have a tone, whereas in Shanghainese,[citation needed] Swedish, Norwegian and many Bantu languages, the contour of each tone operates at the word level. That is, a trisyllabic word in a three-tone syllable-tone language has many more tonal possibilities (3 × 3 × 3 = 27) than a monosyllabic word (3), but there is no such difference in a word-tone language. For example, Shanghainese has two contrastive (phonemic) tones no matter how many syllables are in a word.[citation needed] Many languages described as having pitch accent are word-tone languages.

Tone sandhi is an intermediate situation, as tones are carried by individual syllables, but affect each other so that they are not independent of each other. For example, a number of Mandarin Chinese suffixes and grammatical particles have what is called (when describing Mandarin Chinese) a "neutral" tone, which has no independent existence. If a syllable with a neutral tone is added to a syllable with a full tone, the pitch contour of the resulting word is entirely determined by that other syllable:

Realization of neutral tones in Mandarin Chinese
Tone in isolation Tone pattern with
added neutral tone
Example Pinyin English meaning
high ˥ ˥꜋ 玻璃 bōli glass
rising ˧˥ ˧˥꜊ 伯伯 bóbo elder uncle
dipping ˨˩˦ ˨˩꜉ 喇叭 lǎba horn
falling ˥˩ ˥˩꜌ 兔子 tùzi rabbit

After high level and high rising tones, the neutral syllable has an independent pitch that looks like a mid-register tone – the default tone in most register-tone languages. However, after a falling tone it takes on a low pitch; the contour tone remains on the first syllable, but the pitch of the second syllable matches where the contour leaves off. And after a low-dipping tone, the contour spreads to the second syllable: the contour remains the same (˨˩˦) whether the word has one syllable or two. In other words, the tone is now the property of the word, not the syllable. Shanghainese has taken this pattern to its extreme, as the pitches of all syllables are determined by the tone before them, so that only the tone of the initial syllable of a word is distinctive.

Lexical tones and grammatical tones

[edit]

Lexical tones are used to distinguish lexical meanings. Grammatical tones, on the other hand, change the grammatical categories.[16] To some authors, the term includes both inflectional and derivational morphology.[17] Tian described a grammatical tone, the induced creaky tone, in Burmese.[18]

Number of tones

[edit]

Languages may distinguish up to five levels of pitch, though the Chori language of Nigeria is described as distinguishing six surface tone registers.[19] Since tone contours may involve up to two shifts in pitch, there are theoretically 5 × 5 × 5 = 125 distinct tones for a language with five registers. However, the most that are actually used in a language is a tenth of that number.

Several Kam–Sui languages of southern China have nine contrastive tones, including contour tones. For example, the Kam language has 9 tones: 3 more-or-less fixed tones (high, mid and low); 4 unidirectional tones (high and low rising, high and low falling); and 2 bidirectional tones (dipping and peaking). This assumes that checked syllables are not counted as having additional tones, as they traditionally are in China. For example, in the traditional reckoning, the Kam language has 15 tones, but 6 occur only in syllables closed with the voiceless stop consonants /p/, /t/ or /k/ and the other 9 occur only in syllables not ending in one of these sounds.

Preliminary work on the Wobe language (part of the Wee continuum) of Liberia and Côte d'Ivoire, the Ticuna language of the Amazon and the Chatino languages of southern Mexico suggests that some dialects may distinguish as many as fourteen tones or more. The Guere language, Dan language and Mano language of Liberia and Ivory Coast have around 10 tones, give or take. The Oto-Manguean languages of Mexico have a huge number of tones as well. The most complex tonal systems are actually found in Africa and the Americas, not East Asia.

Tonal change

[edit]

Tone terracing

[edit]

Tones are realized as pitch only in a relative sense. "High tone" and "low tone" are only meaningful relative to the speaker's vocal range and in comparing one syllable to the next, rather than as a contrast of absolute pitch such as one finds in music. As a result, when one combines tone with sentence prosody, the absolute pitch of a high tone at the end of a prosodic unit may be lower than that of a low tone at the beginning of the unit, because of the universal tendency (in both tonal and non-tonal languages) for pitch to decrease with time in a process called downdrift.

Tones may affect each other just as consonants and vowels do. In many register-tone languages, low tones may cause a downstep in following high or mid tones; the effect is such that even while the low tones remain at the lower end of the speaker's vocal range (which is itself descending due to downdrift), the high tones drop incrementally like steps in a stairway or terraced rice fields, until finally the tones merge and the system has to be reset. This effect is called tone terracing.

Sometimes a tone may remain as the sole realization of a grammatical particle after the original consonant and vowel disappear, so it can only be heard by its effect on other tones. It may cause downstep, or it may combine with other tones to form contours. These are called floating tones.

Tone sandhi

[edit]

In many contour-tone languages, one tone may affect the shape of an adjacent tone. The affected tone may become something new, a tone that only occurs in such situations, or it may be changed into a different existing tone. This is called tone sandhi. In Mandarin Chinese, for example, a dipping tone between two other tones is reduced to a simple low tone, which otherwise does not occur in Mandarin Chinese, whereas if two dipping tones occur in a row, the first becomes a rising tone, indistinguishable from other rising tones in the language. For example, the words 很 [xɤn˨˩˦] ('very') and 好 [xaʊ˨˩˦] ('good') produce the phrase 很好 [xɤn˧˥ xaʊ˨˩˦] ('very good'). The two transcriptions may be conflated with reversed tone letters as [xɤn˨˩˦꜔꜒xaʊ˨˩˦].

Right- and left-dominant sandhi

[edit]

Tone sandhi in Sinitic languages can be classified with a left-dominant or right-dominant system. In a language of the right-dominant system, the right-most syllable of a word retains its citation tone (i.e., the tone in its isolation form). All the other syllables of the word must take their sandhi form.[20][21] Taiwanese Southern Min is known for its complex sandhi system. Example: from 鹹 kiam5 'salty', 酸 sng1 'sour' and 甜 tinn1 'sweet' is the word 鹹酸甜 kiam5–7 sng1–7 tinn1, also transcribed kiam7 sng7 tinn1 'candied fruit'. In this example, only the last syllable remains unchanged.

Tone change

[edit]

Tone change must be distinguished from tone sandhi. Tone sandhi is a compulsory change that occurs when certain tones are juxtaposed. Tone change, however, is a morphologically conditioned alternation and is used as an inflectional or a derivational strategy.[22] Lien indicated that causative verbs in modern Southern Min are expressed with tonal alternation, and that tonal alternation may come from earlier affixes. Examples: 長 tng5 'long' vs. tng2 'grow'; 斷 tng7 'break' vs. tng2 'cause to break'.[23] Also, 毒 in Taiwanese Southern Min has two pronunciations: to̍k (entering tone) means 'poison' or 'poisonous', while thāu (departing tone) means 'to kill with poison'.[24] The same usage can be found in Min, Yue, and Hakka.[25]

Uses of tone

[edit]

In East Asia, tone is typically lexical. That is, tone is used to distinguish words which would otherwise be homonyms. This is characteristic of heavily tonal languages such as Chinese, Vietnamese, Thai, and Hmong.

However, in many African languages, especially in the Niger–Congo family, tone can be both lexical and grammatical. In the Kru languages, a combination of these patterns is found: nouns tend to have complex tone systems but are not much affected by grammatical inflections, whereas verbs tend to have simple tone systems, which are inflected to indicate tense and mood, person, and polarity, so that tone may be the only distinguishing feature between "you went" and "I won't go".

In Yoruba, much of the lexical and grammatical information is carried by tone. In languages of West Africa such as Yoruba, people may even communicate with so-called "talking drums", which are modulated to imitate the tones of the language,[26] or by whistling the tones of speech.[citation needed]

Note that tonal languages are not distributed evenly across the same range as non-tonal languages.[27] Instead, the majority of tone languages belong to the Niger-Congo, Sino-Tibetan and Vietic groups, which are then composed by a large majority of tone languages and dominate a single region. Only in limited locations (South Africa, New Guinea, Mexico, Brazil and a few others) do tone languages occur as individual members or small clusters within a non-tone dominated area. In some locations, like Central America, it may represent no more than an incidental effect of which languages were included when one examines the distribution; for groups like Khoi-San in Southern Africa and Papuan languages, whole families of languages possess tonality but simply have relatively few members, and for some North American tone languages, multiple independent origins are suspected.

If generally considering only complex-tone vs. no-tone, it might be concluded that tone is almost always an ancient feature within a language family that is highly conserved among members. However, when considered in addition to "simple" tone systems that include only two tones, tone, as a whole, appears to be more labile, appearing several times within Indo-European languages, several times in American languages, and several times in Papuan families.[27] That may indicate that rather than a trait unique to some language families, tone is a latent feature of most language families that may more easily arise and disappear as languages change over time.[28]

A 2015 study by Caleb Everett argued that tonal languages are more common in hot and humid climates, which make them easier to pronounce, even when considering familial relationships. If the conclusions of Everett's work are sound, this is perhaps the first known case of influence of the environment on the structure of the languages spoken in it.[29][30] The proposed relationship between climate and tone is controversial, and logical and statistical issues have been raised by various scholars.[31][32][33]

Tone and inflection

[edit]

Tone has long been viewed as a phonological system. It was not until recent years that tone was found to play a role in inflectional morphology. Palancar and Léonard (2016)[34] provided an example with Tlatepuzco Chinantec (an Oto-Manguean language spoken in Southern Mexico), where tones are able to distinguish mood, person, and number:

Forms of 'bend' in Tlatepuzco Chinantec
1 SG 1 PL 2 3
Completive húʔ˩ húʔ˩˥ húʔ˩ húʔ˧
Incompletive húʔ˩˧ húʔ˩˧ húʔ˩˧ húʔ˧
Irrealis húʔ˩˥ húʔ˩˥ húʔ˩˥ húʔ˧

In Iau language (the most tonally complex Lakes Plain language, predominantly monosyllabic), nouns have an inherent tone (e.g. be˧ 'fire' but be˦˧ 'flower'), but verbs don't have any inherent tone. For verbs, a tone is used to mark aspect. The first work that mentioned this was published in 1986.[35] Example paradigms:[36]

Aspects in Iau
Tone Aspect ba 'come' tai 'moving s.t. toward' da 'locate s.t. inside'
tone 2 totality of action, punctual ba˦ 'came' tai˦ 'pulled' da˦ 'ate, put it in (stomach)'
tone 3 resultative durative ba˧ 'has come' tai˧ 'has been pulled off' da˧ 'has been loaded onto s.t.'
tone 21 totality of action, incomplete ba˦˥ 'might come' tai˦˥ 'might pull'
tone 43 resultative punctual ba˨˧ 'came to get' tai˨˧ 'land on s.t.' da˨˧ 'dip into water, wash s.t.'
tone 24 telic punctual ba˦˨ 'came to end' tai˦˨ 'fell to ground' da˦˨ 'eaten it all up'
tone 23 telic, incomplete ba˦˧ 'still coming' tai˦˧ 'still falling' da˦˧ 'still eating it up'
tone 34 totality of action, durative ba˧˨ 'be coming' tai˧˨ 'be pulling'
tone 243 telic durative ba˦˨˧ 'sticking to' tai˦˨˧ 'be falling'
tai˦˥–˧˨ 'pull on s.t., shake hands'
tai˦˥–˧ 'have pulled s.t., shook hands'

Tones are used to differentiate cases as well, as in Maasai language (a Nilo-Saharan language spoken in Kenya and Tanzania):[37]

Case difference in Maasai
gloss Nominative Accusative
'head' èlʊ̀kʊ̀nyá èlʊ́kʊ́nyá
'rat' èndérònì èndèrónì

Certain varieties of Chinese are known to express meaning by means of tone change although further investigations are required. Examples from two Yue dialects spoken in Guangdong Province are shown below.[22] In Taishan, tone change indicates the grammatical number of personal pronouns. In Zhongshan, perfective verbs are marked with tone change.

  • Taishan
ngwoi˧ 'I' (singular)
ngwoi˨ 'we' (plural)
  • Zhongshan
hy˨ 'go'
hy˧˥ 'gone' (perfective)

The following table compares the personal pronouns of Sixian dialect (a dialect of Taiwanese Hakka)[38] with Zaiwa and Jingpho[39] (both Tibeto-Burman languages spoken in Yunnan and Burma). From this table, we find the distinction between nominative, genitive, and accusative is marked by tone change and sound alternation.

Comparison of personal pronouns
Sixian Zaiwa Jingpho
1 Nom ŋai˩ ŋo˥˩ ŋai˧
1 Gen ŋa˨˦ or ŋai˩ ke˥ ŋa˥ ŋjeʔ˥
1 Acc ŋai˩ ŋo˧˩ ŋai˧
2 Nom ŋ̍˩ naŋ˥˩ naŋ˧
2 Gen ŋia˨˦ or ŋ̍˩ ke˥ naŋ˥ naʔ˥
2 Acc ŋ̍˩ naŋ˧˩ naŋ˧
3 Nom ki˩ jaŋ˧˩ khji˧
3 Gen kia˨˦ or ki˩ ke˥ jaŋ˥˩ khjiʔ˥
3 Acc ki˩ jaŋ˧˩ khji˧

Phonetic notation

[edit]

There are several approaches to notating tones in the description of a language. A fundamental difference is between phonemic and phonetic transcription.

A phonemic notation will typically lack any consideration of the actual phonetic values of the tones. Such notations are especially common when comparing dialects with wildly different phonetic realizations of what are historically the same set of tones. In Chinese, for example, the "four tones" may be assigned numbers, such as ① to ④ or – after the historical tone split that affected all Chinese languages to at least some extent – ① to ⑧ (with odd numbers for the yin tones and even numbers for the yang). In traditional Chinese notation, the equivalent diacritics ꜀◌ ꜂◌ ◌꜄ ◌꜆ are attached to the Chinese character, marking the same distinctions, plus underlined ꜁◌ ꜃◌ ◌꜅ ◌꜇ for the yang tones where a split has occurred. If further splits occurred in some language or dialect, the results may be numbered '4a' and '4b' or something similar. Among the Kra-Dai languages, tones are typically assigned the letters A through D, or, after a historical tone split similar to what occurred in Chinese, A1 to D1 and A2 to D2; see Proto-Tai language. With such a system, it can be seen which words in two languages have the same historical tone (say tone ③) even though they no longer sound anything alike.

Also phonemic are upstep and downstep, which are indicated by the IPA diacritics and , respectively, or by the typographic substitutes and , respectively. Upstep and downstep affect the tones within a language as it is being spoken, typically due to grammatical inflection or when certain tones are brought together. (For example, a high tone may be stepped down when it occurs after a low tone, compared to the pitch it would have after a mid tone or another high tone.)

Phonetic notation records the actual relative pitch of the tones. Since tones tend to vary over time periods as short as centuries, this means that the historical connections among the tones of two language varieties will generally be lost by such notation, even if they are dialects of the same language.

  • The easiest notation from a typographical perspective – but one that is internationally ambiguous – is a numbering system, with the pitch levels assigned digits and each tone transcribed as a digit (or as a sequence of digits if a contour tone). Such systems tend to be idiosyncratic (high tone may be assigned the digit 1, 3, or 5, for example) and have therefore not been adopted for the International Phonetic Alphabet. For instance, high tone is conventionally written with a 1 and low tone with a 4 or 5 when transcribing the Kru languages of Liberia, but with 1 for low and 5 for high for the Omotic languages of Ethiopia. The tone ⟨53⟩ in a Kru language is thus the same pitch contour as one written ⟨35⟩ in an Omotic language. Pitch value 1 may be distinguished from tone number 1 by doubling it or making it superscript or both.
  • For simple tone systems, a series of diacritics such as ⟨ó⟩ for high tone and ⟨ò⟩ for low tone may be practical. This has been adopted by the IPA, but is not easy to adapt to complex contour tone systems (see under Chinese below for one workaround). The five IPA diacritics for level tones are ⟨ő ó ō ò ȍ⟩, with doubled high and low diacritics for extra high and extra low (or 'top' and 'bottom'). The diacritics combine to form contour tones, of which ⟨ô ǒ o᷄ o᷅ o᷆ o᷇ o᷈ o᷉⟩ have Unicode font support (support for additional combinations is sparse). Sometimes, a non-IPA vertical diacritic is seen for a second, higher mid tone, ⟨⟩, so a language with four or six level tones may be transcribed ⟨ó ō ò⟩ or ⟨ő ó ō ò ȍ⟩. For the Chinantecan languages of Mexico, the diacritics ◌ꜗ ◌ꜘ ◌ꜙ ◌ꜚ have been used, but they are a local convention not accepted by the IPA.
  • A retired IPA system, sometimes still encountered,[40] traces the shape of the tone (the pitch trace) before the syllable, where a stress mark would go. Thus level, rising, falling, peaking and dipping tones on [o] are ⟨ˉo ˊo ˋo ˆo ˇo⟩; these are read as high tones when contrasted with the low tones ⟨ˍo ˏo ˎo ꞈo ˬo⟩ or with mid tones, which are poorly supported by Unicode (e.g. falling ⟨˴o⟩). For a concrete example, when the diacritics are applied to the Hanyu Pinyin syllable [sa] used in Standard Chinese, it becomes easier to identify more specific rising and falling tones: [ˆsa] (high peaking tone), [ˍsa] (low level tone), etc. This system was used in combination with stress marks to indicate intonation as well, as in English [ˈgʊd ˌɑːftə`nuːn] (now transcribed [ˈgʊd ˌɑːftə↘nuːn]).
  • The most flexible system, based on the previous spacing diacritics but with the addition of a stem (like the staff of musical notation), is that of the IPA-adopted Chao tone letters, which are iconic schematics of the pitch trace of the tone in question. Because musical staff notation is international, there is no international ambiguity with the Chao/IPA tone letters: a line at the top of the staff is high tone, a line at the bottom is low tone, and the shape of the line is a schematic of the contour of the tone (as visible in a pitch trace). They are most commonly used for complex contour systems, such as those of the languages of Liberia and southern China.
The Chao tone letters have two variants. The left-stem letters, , are used for tone sandhi. These are especially important for the Min Chinese languages. For example, a word may be pronounced /ɕim˥˧/ in isolation, but in a compound the tone will shift to /ɕim˦mĩʔ˧˨/. This can be notated morphophonemically as //ɕim˥˧꜓mĩʔ˧˨//, where the back-to-front tone letters simultaneously show the underlying tone and the value in this word. Using the local (and internationally ambiguous) non-IPA numbering system, the compound may be written //ɕim⁵³⁻⁴⁴ mĩʔ³²//. Left-stem letters may also be combined to form contour tones.
The second Chao letter variant are the dotted tone letters , which are used to indicate the pitch of neutral tones. These are phonemically null, and may be indicated with the digit '0' in a numbering system, but take specific pitches depending on the preceding phonemic tone. When combined with tone sandhi, the left-stem dotted tone letters are seen.
Conventions for five-pitch transcription[41]
Name Top tone (extra-high) High tone High-mid tone Mid tone Low-mid tone Low tone Bottom tone (extra-low)
IPA tone diacritic ◌̋ ◌́ ◌̄ ◌̀ ◌̏
IPA chart tone letter ◌˥ ◌˦ ◌˧ ◌˨ ◌˩
Neutral tone letter ◌꜈ ◌꜉ ◌꜊ ◌꜋ ◌꜌
Sandhi tone letter[b] ◌꜒ ◌꜓ ◌꜔ ◌꜕ ◌꜖
Sandhi neutral tone letter ◌꜍ ◌꜎ ◌꜏ ◌꜐ ◌꜑
Name Falling tone High falling tone Low falling tone
IPA tone diacritic ◌̂ ◌᷇ ◌᷆
 
 
IPA tone letters
˥˩, ˥˨, ˥˧, ˥˦,
˦˩, ˦˨, ˦˧,
˧˩, ˧˨, ˨˩
◌˥˧, ◌˥˦, ◌˦˧, &c. ◌˧˩, ◌˧˨, ◌˨˩, &c.
Name Rising tone High rising tone Low rising tone
IPA tone diacritic ◌̌ ◌᷄ ◌᷅
 
 
IPA tone letters
˩˥, ˩˦, ˩˧, ˩˨,
˨˥, ˨˦, ˨˧,
˧˥, ˧˦, ˦˥
◌˧˥, ◌˦˥, ◌˧˦, &c. ◌˩˧, ◌˨˧, ◌˩˨, &c.
Name Dipping tone
(falling–rising)
Peaking tone
(rising–falling)
IPA tone diacritic ◌᷉ ◌᷈
IPA tone letters
(various)
  • ˨˩˨,˨˩˧,˨˩˦,˨˩˥,
    ˧˩˨,˧˩˧,˧˩˦,˧˩˥,
    ˧˨˧,˧˨˦,˧˨˥,
    ˦˩˨,˦˩˧,˦˩˦,˦˩˥,
    ˦˨˧,˦˨˦,˦˨˥,
    ˦˧˦,˦˧˥,
    ˥˩˨,˥˩˧,˥˩˦,˥˩˥,
    ˥˨˧,˥˨˦,˥˨˥,
    ˥˧˦,˥˧˥,
    ˥˦˥
(various)
  • ˦˥˦,˦˥˧,˦˥˨,˦˥˩,
    ˧˥˦,˧˥˧,˧˥˨,˧˥˩,
    ˧˦˧,˧˦˨,˧˦˩,
    ˨˥˦,˨˥˧,˨˥˨,˨˥˩,
    ˨˦˧,˨˦˨,˨˦˩,
    ˨˧˨,˨˧˩,
    ˩˥˦,˩˥˧,˩˥˨,˩˥˩,
    ˩˦˧,˩˦˨,˩˦˩,
    ˩˧˨,˩˧˩,
    ˩˨˩

An IPA/Chao tone letter will rarely be composed of more than three elements (which are sufficient for peaking and dipping tones). Occasionally, however, peaking–dipping and dipping–peaking tones, which require four elements – or even double-peaking and double-dipping tones, which require five – are encountered. This is usually only the case when prosody is superposed on lexical or grammatical tone, but a good computer font will allow an indefinite number of tone letters to be concatenated. The IPA diacritics placed over vowels and other letters have not been extended to this level of complexity.

Africa

[edit]

In African linguistics (as well as in many African orthographies), a set of diacritics is usual to mark tone. The most common are a subset of the International Phonetic Alphabet:

High tone acute á
Mid tone macron ā
Low tone grave à

Minor variations are common. In many three-tone languages, it is usual to mark high and low tone as indicated above but to omit marking of the mid tone: (high), ma (mid), (low). Similarly, in two-tone languages, only one tone may be marked explicitly, usually the less common or more 'marked' tone (see markedness).

When digits are used, typically 1 is high and 5 is low, except in Omotic languages, where 1 is low and 5 or 6 is high. In languages with just two tones, 1 may be high and 2 low, etc.

Asia

[edit]

In the Chinese tradition, digits are assigned to various tones (see tone number). For instance, Standard Mandarin Chinese, the official language of China, has four lexically contrastive tones, and the digits 1, 2, 3, and 4 are assigned to four tones. Syllables can sometimes be toneless and are described as having a neutral tone, typically indicated by omitting tone markings. Chinese varieties are traditionally described in terms of four tonal categories ping ('level'), shang ('rising'), qu ('exiting'), ru ('entering'), based on the traditional analysis of Middle Chinese (see Four tones); note that these are not at all the same as the four tones of modern standard Mandarin Chinese.[c] Depending on the dialect, each of these categories may then be divided into two tones, typically called yin and yang. Typically, syllables carrying the ru tones are closed by voiceless stops in Chinese varieties that have such coda(s) so in such dialects, ru is not a tonal category in the sense used by Western linguistics but rather a category of syllable structures. Chinese phonologists perceived these checked syllables as having concomitant short tones, justifying them as a tonal category. In Middle Chinese, when the tonal categories were established, the shang and qu tones also had characteristic final obstruents with concomitant tonic differences whereas syllables bearing the ping tone ended in a simple sonorant. An alternative to using the Chinese category names is assigning to each category a digit ranging from 1 to 8, sometimes higher for some Southern Chinese dialects with additional tone splits. Syllables belonging to the same tone category differ drastically in actual phonetic tone across the varieties of Chinese even among dialects of the same group. For example, the yin ping tone is a high level tone in Beijing Mandarin Chinese but a low level tone in Tianjin Mandarin Chinese.

More iconic systems use tone numbers or an equivalent set of graphic pictograms known as "Chao tone letters". These divide the pitch into five levels, with the lowest being assigned the value 1 and the highest the value 5. (This is the opposite of equivalent systems in Africa and the Americas.) The variation in pitch of a tone contour is notated as a string of two or three numbers. For instance, the four Mandarin Chinese tones are transcribed as follows (the tone letters will not display properly without a compatible font installed):

Tones of Standard Chinese (Mandarin)
High tone 55 ˥ (Tone 1)
Mid rising tone 35 ˧˥ (Tone 2)
Low dipping tone 21(4) ˨˩˦ (Tone 3)
High falling tone 51 ˥˩ (Tone 4)

A mid-level tone would be indicated by /33/, a low level tone /11/, etc. The doubling of the number is commonly used with level tones to distinguish them from tone numbers; tone 3 in Mandarin Chinese, for example, is not mid /3/. However, it is not necessary with tone letters, so /33/ = /˧˧/ or simply /˧/. If a distinction is made, it may be that /˧/ is mid tone in a register system and /˧˧/ is mid level tone in a contour system, or /˧/ may be mid tone on a short syllable or a mid checked tone, while /˧˧/ is mid tone on a long syllable or a mid unchecked tone.

IPA diacritic notation is also sometimes seen for Chinese. One reason it is not more widespread is that only two contour tones, rising /ɔ̌/ and falling /ɔ̂/, are widely supported by IPA fonts while several Chinese varieties have more than one rising or falling tone. One common workaround is to retain standard IPA /ɔ̌/ and /ɔ̂/ for high-rising (e.g. /˧˥/) and high-falling (e.g. /˥˧/) tones and to use the subscript diacritics /ɔ̗/ and /ɔ̖/ for low-rising (e.g. /˩˧/) and low-falling (e.g. /˧˩/) tones.

North America

[edit]

Several North American languages have tone, one of which is Cherokee, an Iroquoian language. Oklahoma Cherokee has six tones (1 low, 2 medium, 3 high, 4 very high, 5 rising and 6 falling).[42] The Tanoan languages have tone as well. For instance, Kiowa has three tones (high, low, falling), while Jemez has four (high, mid, low, and falling).

In Mesoamericanist linguistics, /1/ stands for high tone and /5/ stands for low tone, except in Oto-Manguean languages for which /1/ may be low tone and /3/ high tone. It is also common to see acute accents for high tone and grave accents for low tone and combinations of these for contour tones. Several popular orthographies use ⟨j⟩ or ⟨h⟩ after a vowel to indicate low tone. The Southern Athabascan languages that include the Navajo and Apache languages are tonal, and are analyzed as having two tones: high and low. One variety of Hopi has developed tone, as has the Cheyenne language.

Tone orthographies

[edit]

In Roman script orthographies, a number of approaches are used. Diacritics are common, as in pinyin, but they tend to be omitted.[43] Thai uses a combination of redundant consonants and diacritics. Tone letters may also be used, for example in Hmong RPA and several minority languages in China. Tone may simply be ignored, as is possible even for highly tonal languages: for example, the Chinese navy has successfully used toneless pinyin in government telegraph communications for decades. Likewise, Chinese reporters abroad may file their stories in toneless pinyin. Dungan, a variety of Mandarin Chinese spoken in Central Asia, has, since 1927, been written in orthographies that do not indicate tone.[43] Ndjuka, in which tone is less important, ignores tone except for a negative marker. However, the reverse is also true: in the Congo, there have been complaints from readers that newspapers written in orthographies without tone marking are insufficiently legible.[citation needed]

Standard Central Thai has five tones–mid, low, falling, high and rising–often indicated respectively by the numbers zero, one, two, three and four. The Thai alphabet is an alphasyllabary, which specifies the tone unambiguously. Tone is indicated by an interaction of the initial consonant of a syllable, the vowel length, the final consonant (if present), and sometimes a tone mark. A particular tone mark may denote different tones depending on the initial consonant. The Shan alphabet, derived from the Burmese script, has five tone letters: , , , , ; a sixth tone is unmarked.

Vietnamese uses the Latin alphabet and its six tones are marked by letters with diacritics above or below a certain vowel. Basic notation for Vietnamese tones are as follows:

Tones of Vietnamese
Name Contour Diacritic Example
ngang mid level, ˧ not marked a
huyền low falling, ˨˩ grave accent à
sắc high rising, ˧˥ acute accent á
hỏi dipping, ˧˩˧ hook above
ngã creaky rising, ˧ˀ˦˥ tilde ã
nặng creaky falling, ˨˩ˀ dot below

The Latin-based Hmong and Iu Mien alphabets use full letters for tones. In Hmong, one of the eight tones (the ˧ tone) is left unwritten while the other seven are indicated by the letters b, m, d, j, v, s, g at the end of the syllable. Since Hmong has no phonemic syllable-final consonants, there is no ambiguity. That system enables Hmong speakers to type their language with an ordinary Latin-letter keyboard without having to resort to diacritics. In the Iu Mien, the letters v, c, h, x, z indicate tones but unlike Hmong, it also has final consonants written before the tone.

The Standard Zhuang and Zhuang languages used to use a unique set of six "tone letters" based on the shapes of numbers, but slightly modified, to depict what tone a syllable was in. This was replaced in 1982 with the use of normal letters in the same manner, like Hmong.

The syllabary of the Nuosu language depicts tone in a unique manner, having separate glyphs for each tone other than for the mid-rising tone, which is denoted by the addition of a diacritic. Take the difference between ꉬ nge [ŋɯ³³], and ꉫ ngex [ŋɯ³⁴]. In romanisation, the letters t, x, and p are used to demarcate tone. As codas are forbidden in Nuosu there is no ambiguity.

Origin and development

[edit]

André-Georges Haudricourt established that Vietnamese tone originated in earlier consonantal contrasts and suggested similar mechanisms for Chinese.[44][45] It is now widely held that Old Chinese did not have phonemically contrastive tone.[46] The historical origin of tone is called tonogenesis, a term coined by James Matisoff.

Tone as an areal feature

[edit]

Tone is sometimes an areal rather than a phylogenetic feature. That is to say, a language may acquire tones through bilingualism if influential neighbouring languages are tonal or if speakers of a tonal language shift to the language in question and bring their tones with them. The process is referred to as contact-induced tonogenesis by linguists.[47] In other cases, tone may arise spontaneously and surprisingly fast: the dialect of Cherokee in Oklahoma has tone, but the dialect in North Carolina does not, even though they were only separated in 1838. Hong Kong English is tonal, a result of the contact between non-tonal British English with Hong Kong Cantonese, a tonal language;[48][49] a similar process of tonogenesis has happened in Singapore English, although under slightly different conditions of linguistic contact, resulting in different tonal outcomes.[49]

Examples

[edit]

Tone arose in the Athabascan languages at least twice, in a patchwork of two systems. In some languages, such as Navajo, syllables with glottalized consonants (including glottal stops) in the syllable coda developed low tones, whereas in others, such as Slavey, they developed high tones, so that the two tonal systems are almost mirror images of each other. Syllables without glottalized codas developed the opposite tone. For example, high tone in Navajo and low tone in Slavey are due to contrast with the tone triggered by the glottalization.

Other Athabascan languages, namely those in western Alaska (such as Koyukon) and the Pacific coast (such as Hupa), did not develop tone. Thus, the Proto-Athabascan word *tuː ('water') is toneless toː in Hupa, high-tone in Navajo, and low-tone in Slavey; while Proto-Athabascan *-ɢʊtʼ ('knee') is toneless -ɢotʼ in Hupa, low-tone -ɡòd in Navajo, and high-tone -ɡóʔ in Slavey. Kingston (2005) provides a phonetic explanation for the opposite development of tone based on the two different ways of producing glottalized consonants with either tense voice on the preceding vowel, which tends to produce a high fundamental frequency, or creaky voice, which tends to produce a low fundamental frequency. Languages with "stiff" glottalized consonants and tense voice developed high tone on the preceding vowel and those with "slack" glottalized consonants with creaky voice developed low tone.

The Bantu languages also have "mirror" tone systems in which the languages in the northwest corner of the Bantu area have the opposite tones of other Bantu languages.

Three Algonquian languages developed tone independently of one another and of neighboring languages: Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Kickapoo. In Cheyenne, tone arose via vowel contraction; the long vowels of Proto-Algonquian contracted into high-pitched vowels in Cheyenne while the short vowels became low-pitched. In Kickapoo, a vowel with a following [h] acquired a low tone, and this tone later extended to all vowels followed by a fricative. In Afrikaans the glottal fricative also lowers the tone of surrounding vowels.

In Mohawk, a glottal stop can disappear in a combination of morphemes, leaving behind a long falling tone. Note that it has the reverse effect of the postulated rising tone in Cantonese or Middle Chinese, derived from a lost final glottal stop.

In Korean, a 2013 study which compared voice recordings of Seoul speech from 1935 and 2005 found that in recent years, lenis consonants (ㅂㅈㄷㄱ), aspirated consonants (ㅍㅊㅌㅋ) and fortis consonants (ㅃㅉㄸㄲ) were shifting from a distinction via voice onset time to that of pitch change, and suggests that the modern Seoul dialect is currently undergoing tonogenesis.[50] These sound shifts still show variations among different speakers, suggesting that the transition is still ongoing.[51] Among 141 examined Seoul speakers, these pitch changes were originally initiated by females born in the 1950s, and have almost reached completion in the speech of those born in the 1990s.[52]

Tonogenesis

[edit]

Triggers of tonogenesis

[edit]

"There is tonogenetic potential in various series of phonemes: glottalized vs. plain consonants, unvoiced vs. voiced, aspirated vs. unaspirated, geminates vs. simple (...), and even among vowels".[53] Very often, tone arises as an effect of the loss or merger of consonants. In a nontonal language, voiced consonants commonly cause following vowels to be pronounced at a lower pitch than other consonants. That is usually a minor phonetic detail of voicing. However, if consonant voicing is subsequently lost, that incidental pitch difference may be left over to carry the distinction that the voicing previously carried (a process called transphonologization) and thus becomes meaningful (phonemic).[54]

This process happened in the Punjabi language: the Punjabi murmured (voiced aspirate) consonants have disappeared and left tone in their wake. If the murmured consonant was at the beginning of a word, it left behind a low tone; at the end, it left behind a high tone. If there was no such consonant, the pitch was unaffected; however, the unaffected words are limited in pitch and did not interfere with the low and high tones. That produced a tone of its own, mid tone. The historical connection is so regular that Punjabi is still written as if it had murmured consonants, and tone is not marked. The written consonants tell the reader which tone to use.[55]

Similarly, final fricatives or other consonants may phonetically affect the pitch of preceding vowels, and if they then weaken to [h] and finally disappear completely, the difference in pitch, now a true difference in tone, carries on in their stead.[56] This was the case with Chinese. Two of the three tones of Middle Chinese, the "rising" and the "departing" tones, arose as the Old Chinese final consonants /ʔ/ and /s/ /h/ disappeared, while syllables that ended with neither of these consonants were interpreted as carrying the third tone, "even". Most varieties descending from Middle Chinese were further affected by a tone split in which each tone divided in two depending on whether the initial consonant was voiced. Vowels following a voiced consonant (depressor consonant) acquired a lower tone as the voicing lost its distinctiveness.[57]

The same changes affected many other languages in the same area, and at around the same time (AD 1000–1500). The tone split, for example, also occurred in Thai and Vietnamese.

In general, voiced initial consonants lead to low tones while vowels after aspirated consonants acquire a high tone. When final consonants are lost, a glottal stop tends to leave a preceding vowel with a high or rising tone (although glottalized vowels tend to be low tone so if the glottal stop causes vowel glottalization, that will tend to leave behind a low vowel). A final fricative tends to leave a preceding vowel with a low or falling tone. Vowel phonation also frequently develops into tone, as can be seen in the case of Burmese.

Stages of tonogenesis

[edit]

The table below shows the process of tonogenesis in White Hmong, described by Martha Ratliff.[58][59] The tone values described in the table are from Christina Esposito.[60][61]

Tonogenesis in White Hmong
Atonal stage CV CVʔ CVh CVCvl
Tonogenesis CV level CV rising CV falling CVCvl atonal
Tone split A1 upper A2 lower B1 upper B2 lower C1 upper C2 lower D1 upper D2 lower
Current [pɔ˦˥] [pɔ˥˨] [pɔ˨˦] [pɔ˨] [pɔ˧] [pɔ̤˦˨] -- [pɔ̰˨˩]

The table below shows the tonogenesis of the Vietnamese language.[62][63][64] The tone values are taken from James Kirby.[65][66]

Tonogenesis in Vietnamese
Atonal stage CV CVx > CVʔ CVs > CVh
Tonogenesis CV mid CV rising CV falling
Tone split A1 higher A2 lower B1 higher B2 lower C1 higher C2 lower
Current ngang /˦/ huyền /˨˩/ sắc /˨˦/ nặng /˨/ hỏi /˧˨/ ngã /˧˥/

The table below is the tonogenesis of Tai Dam (Black Tai). Displayed in the first row is Proto-Southern Kra-Dai, as reconstructed by Peter K. Norquest.[67][68][69]

Tonogenesis in Tai Dam
Proto-SKD *∅ *-h *-ʔ *-ʔ͡C
Tonogenesis level rising falling
Tone split A1 A2 B1 B2 C1 C2 D1 D2
Current /˨/ /˥/ /˦˥/ /˦/ /˨˩ʔ/ /˧˩ʔ/ /˦˥/ /˦/

The table below shows the tonogenesis of the Chinese languages.[70][71]

Tonogenesis in Chinese
Atonal stage -∅, -N -s -p, -t, -k
Tonogenesis 平 píng (level) 上 shǎng (rising) 去 qù (departing) 入 rù (entering)
Tone split A1 A2 B1 B2 C1 C2 D1 D2

The tone values are listed below:

Tone values of modern Chinese lects
Class SC[72] TSH[73] THH[73] XMM[74] FZM[74] SZW[72] SXW[72]
A1 /˥/ /˨˦/ /˥˧/ /˥/ /˦/ /˦/ /˦˩/
A2 /˧˥/ /˩/ /˥/ /˨˦/ /˥˨/ /˩˧/ /˩˥/
B1 /˨˩˦/ /˧˩/ /˨˦/ /˥˩/ /˧˩/ /˥˨/ /˥/
B2 /˨/
C1 /˥˩/ /˥˥/ /˩/ /˩/ /˨˩˧/ /˦˩˨/ /˦/
C2 /˧/ /˧/ /˨˦˨/ /˧˩/ /˧˩/
D1 /˥, ˧˥
˨˩˦, ˥˩/
/˨/ /˥/ /˧˨/ /˨˧/ /˥/ /˥/
D2 /˥/ /˨/ /˥/ /˦/ /˨/ /˧˨/

The tones across all varieties (or dialects) of Chinese correspond to each other, although they may not correspond to each other perfectly. Moreover, listed above are citation tones, but in actual conversations, obligatory sandhi rules will reshape them. The Sixian and Hailu Hakka in Taiwan are famous for their near-regular and opposite pattern (of pitch height). Both will be compared with Standard Chinese below.

Word Hailu Hakka Standard Chinese Sixian Hakka
老人家 'elder people' loLR nginHL gaHF laoLF renMR jiaHL
(→ laoLFrenjia)
loMF nginLL gaLR
碗公 'bowl' vonLR gungHF wanLF gongHL vonMF gungLR
車站 'bus stop' chaHF zhamLL cheHL zhanHF caLR zamHL
自行車 'bicycle' ciiML hangHL chaHF ziHF xingMR cheHL ciiHL hangLL caLR
  • H: high; M: mid; L: low;
  • L: level; R: rising; F: falling

The table below shows Punjabi tonogenesis in bisyllabic words. Unlike the above four examples, Punjab does not fall under the East Asian tone sprachbund, instead developing phonemic tone separately. In addition, unlike the above languages, which developed tone from syllable-final consonants, Punjabi developed tone from its voiced aspirated stops losing their aspiration.[75] Tone occurs in monosyllabic words as well, but is not discussed in the chart below.

Tonogenesis in Punjabi
Atonal stage C(V)VC̬ʰ(V)V C̬ʰ(V)VC(V)V C(V)VC(V)V
Tonogenesis C̬ʰ → V́C̬V̀

/ V_V

C̬ʰVC(V)V C̬ʰVVC(V)V -
C̬ʰ → T̥V, R̬V / #_V C̬ʰVV → T̥VV̀, R̬VV̀ / #_VV
Result C(V)V́C̬(V)V̀ T̥VC(V)V R̬VC(V)V T̥VV̀C(V)V R̬VV̀C(V)V C(V)VC(V)V
  • C = any consonant; T = non-retroflex stop; R = retroflex stop; C̬ = voiced; C̥ = unvoiced; Cʰ = aspirated
  • V = Neutral tone, V́ = Rising tone, V̀ = Falling tone)

List of tonal languages

[edit]

Africa

[edit]

Most languages of Sub-Saharan Africa are members of the Niger-Congo family, which is predominantly tonal; notable exceptions are Swahili (in the southeast), most languages spoken in the Senegambia (among them Wolof, Serer and Cangin languages), and Fulani. The Afroasiatic languages include both tonal (Chadic, Omotic) and nontonal (Semitic, Berber, Egyptian, and most Cushitic) branches.[76] All three Khoisan language families—Khoe, Kx'a and Tuu—are tonal. Most languages of the Nilo-Saharan family are tonal.

Asia

[edit]

Numerous tonal languages are widely spoken in China and Mainland Southeast Asia. Sino-Tibetan languages (including Meitei-Lon, Burmese, Mog and most varieties of Chinese; though some, such as Shanghainese, are only marginally tonal[77]) and Kra–Dai languages (including Thai and Lao) are mostly tonal. The Hmong–Mien languages are some of the most tonal languages in the world, with as many as twelve phonemically distinct tones. Austronesian and Austroasiatic languages are mostly non-tonal, with a number of exceptions, e.g. Vietnamese (Austroasiatic), Cèmuhî and Yabem (Austronesian).[78] Tones in Vietnamese[79] and Tsat may result from Chinese influence on both languages. There were tones in Middle Korean[80][81][82] and a few tones in Japanese.[83][84][85] Other languages represented in the region, such as Mongolian and Uyghur, belong to language families that do not contain any tonality as defined here. In South Asia tonal languages are rare, but some Indo-Aryan languages have tonality, including Punjabi, Haryanvi, Khariboli, and Dogri,[86][87][88][89] Sylheti,[90] Chittagonian, Rohingya, Chakma as well as the Eastern Bengali dialects.[91][92]

Americas

[edit]

A large number of North, South and Central American languages are tonal, including many of the Athabaskan languages of Alaska and the American Southwest (including Navajo),[11] and the Oto-Manguean languages of Mexico. Among the Mayan languages, which are mostly non-tonal, Yucatec (with the largest number of speakers), Uspantek, and one dialect of Tzotzil have developed tone systems. The Ticuna language of the western Amazon is perhaps the most tonal language of the Americas. Other languages of the western Amazon have fairly simple tone systems as well. However, although tone systems have been recorded for many American languages, little theoretical work has been completed for the characterization of their tone systems. In different cases, Oto-Manguean tone languages in Mexico have been found to possess tone systems similar to both Asian and African tone languages.[93]

Europe

[edit]

Norwegian[94] and Swedish share tonal language features via the 'Single' and 'Double' tones, which can be marked in phonetic descriptions by either a preceding ' (single tone) or ៴ (double tone). The single tone starts low and rises to a high note (˩˦). The double tone starts higher than the single tone, falls, and then rises again to a higher pitch than the start (˨˩˦), similar to the Mandarin third tone (as in the word , /ni˨˩˦/).

Examples in Norwegian: 'bønder (farmers) and ៴bønner (beans) are, apart from the intonation, phonetically identical (despite the spelling difference). Similarly, and with in this case identical spelling, 'tømmer (timber) and ៴tømmer (present tense of verb tømme – to empty) are distinguished only through intonation.

The Scandinavian tone system is more correctly described as a pitch accent system because it only appears in combination with stress. It became phonemic because the number of syllables in certain words changed since the Old Norse period. A former one-syllable word which developed an additional syllable because of an epenthetic vowel or an added suffix kept its one-syllable pronunciation in contrast with a former two-syllable word that it was otherwise homophonous with. It previously also existed in Danish but has in nearly all forms of Danish developed into stød which is a rather a difference in vowel phonation but morphologically also behaves like a pitch accent.

A pitch accent system also developed within the Balto-Slavic languages and still exists in Lithuanian, Latvian (with one tone resembling the Danish stød), Slovenian and Serbo-Croatian.

According to Watson, Scouse contrasts certain tones,[95] and some forms of Rhineland German can also be described as having a pitch accent system.

Summary

[edit]

Languages that are tonal include:

In some cases, it is difficult to determine whether a language is tonal. For example, the Ket language of Siberia has been described as having up to eight tones by some investigators, as having four tones by others, but by some as having no tone at all. In cases such as these, the classification of a language as tonal may depend on the researcher's interpretation of what tone is. For instance, the Burmese language has phonetic tone, but each of its three tones is accompanied by a distinctive phonation (creaky, murmured or plain vowels). It could be argued either that the tone is incidental to the phonation, in which case Burmese would not be phonemically tonal, or that the phonation is incidental to the tone, in which case it would be considered tonal. Something similar appears to be the case with Ket.

The 19th-century constructed language Solresol can consist of only tone, but unlike all natural tonal languages, Solresol's tone is absolute, rather than relative, and no tone sandhi occurs.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
In , tone is the systematic use of pitch variations to distinguish lexical, grammatical, or morphological meaning in a , where specific pitch patterns are assigned to syllables or words to create contrasts. Unlike intonation, which uses pitch to convey prosodic features such as emphasis or sentence type across phrases in non-tonal languages, tone in tonal languages operates at the word or level to alter semantic content. For instance, in , the syllable ma can mean "mother" with a high-level tone, "" with a rising tone, "" with a falling-rising tone, or a question particle with a falling tone, demonstrating how tone creates minimal pairs. Tonal systems are a defining feature of approximately 40 to 60 percent of the world's languages, with the highest concentrations in , , and parts of and the . These languages, often classified as tonal, contrast tones such as high, mid, low (register or level tones) or rising, falling, and complex contours, with many systems combining both types to encode meaning. Tone can interact with other phonological elements, including consonants and vowels, and may undergo processes like spreading, assimilation, or downdrift within utterances. The study of tone encompasses its phonological representation, acquisition, and typological diversity, revealing that tonal contrasts are not universal but arise in diverse language families, from Sino-Tibetan to Niger-Congo and Oto-Manguean. While non-tonal languages like English rely on stress and intonation for prosody, tonal languages integrate pitch as a core phonemic property, influencing everything from to cross-linguistic .

Fundamentals

Definition and characteristics

In linguistics, tone refers to the use of pitch to distinguish lexical, grammatical, or morphological meaning in a language, functioning similarly to consonants and vowels in non-tonal languages. This feature is suprasegmental, meaning it extends over more than one sound segment, typically associating with entire or words rather than individual phonemes. Tones serve a contrastive function, where differences in pitch , direction, or contour can alter word meanings; for instance, high versus low pitch on a syllable can signify entirely different concepts. A classic example of tonal contrast appears in , a language with four main tones plus a neutral tone. The syllable pronounced with a high-level pitch, (first tone), means "," while the same syllable with a low-falling-rising pitch, (third tone), means "horse"—illustrating how tone alone creates minimal pairs that differentiate vocabulary. Such systems highlight tone's role in lexical disambiguation, where pitch variations are phonemic and essential for comprehension. The recognition of tone as a distinct linguistic phenomenon gained prominence in the mid-20th century through systematic studies, notably Kenneth L. Pike's 1948 work Tone Languages, which developed techniques for analyzing pitch contrasts in non-Indo-European languages. Tonal languages are estimated to comprise 60–70% of the world's languages, predominantly in regions like , , and parts of the , underscoring tone's global prevalence and diversity. In tonal languages, pitch serves a lexical or grammatical function by distinguishing meaning through contrastive tones on multiple syllables within a word, whereas in pitch-accent languages, pitch prominence is typically restricted to a single per word or , with other syllables bearing a default or non-contrastive pitch. For instance, Japanese exemplifies a pitch-accent system where the location of the high-pitch accent on one determines word meaning, but subsequent syllables do not carry independent contrastive tones, unlike Thai, a tonal language where each can bear one of five distinct tones (mid, low, falling, high, rising) to create lexical contrasts. Tone must also be distinguished from intonation, which involves pitch variations at the phrase or level to convey prosodic information such as emphasis, question intonation, or emotional nuance, rather than encoding lexical differences. In non-tonal languages like English, rising intonation at the end of a sentence signals a question without altering word meanings, whereas in tonal languages such as Mandarin, lexical tones (e.g., high tone on meaning 'mother' versus rising tone on meaning 'hemp') operate independently of, though sometimes interacting with, intonational contours. A rare but illustrative phenomenon highlighting tone's unique morphophonological role is tonal polarity, observed in certain African languages like Kɔnni, where an or adjacent tone-bearing unit inverts to the opposite tone value (e.g., high to low) relative to the stem, ensuring contrast without relying on stress or accent. Linguists identify tonal languages primarily by the criterion that tone is obligatory and contrastive for virtually all words or syllables, often involving multiple tone levels or contours per word, in contrast to accent languages where pitch is optional, prominence-based, and limited to one site per . This functional obligatoriness distinguishes tone systems from the more variable pitch cues in stress-accent or pitch-accent languages.

Phonetics and phonology

Phonation and tone production

Tone production in linguistics primarily involves the vibration of the vocal folds during , where the (F0) of these vibrations determines the perceived pitch that distinguishes lexical tones. In most tonal languages, tones are realized through variations in F0 contours, such as rising, falling, high, mid, or low patterns, which listeners perceive as contrastive categories. For instance, a high tone typically features a relatively stable or rising F0, while a low tone involves a lower or falling F0 trajectory. This perceptual reliance on F0 is evident across languages like and Thai, where even subtle differences in F0 height or direction can alter word meaning. Phonation types play a crucial role in tone production, with —characterized by regular vocal fold vibration—serving as the default for the majority of tones in most languages. However, certain tonal systems incorporate non-modal , such as breathy or , particularly in register tones that combine pitch with voice quality. In Vietnamese, for example, both the heavy tone (nặng) and the broken tone (ngã) are often produced with creaky , involving irregular, low-amplitude vocal fold vibrations, though the creak occurs at the end for nặng and in the middle for ngã. These contrasts help define tonal registers, grouping tones into upper (tense, higher pitch) and lower (lax, lower pitch) sets. Articulatorily, tones arise from precise laryngeal adjustments that modulate vocal fold tension, length, and mass, thereby controlling F0. Tense vocal folds, achieved through contraction of the , raise F0 for high tones, while lax folds, via relaxation or adduction, lower it for low tones. These mechanisms allow speakers to produce dynamic F0 contours over syllables, as seen in contour tones like the rising tone in Mandarin. Acoustically, beyond F0, tones exhibit variations in duration (longer for low tones in some languages), intensity (higher for mid tones due to greater subglottal pressure), and formant structures, where elevated F0 can shift formant frequencies upward, affecting quality perception. In languages like Vietnamese, breathy reduces intensity and introduces spectral tilt, further distinguishing tones. Cross-linguistically, some languages integrate voice quality extensively with pitch for tone production, exceeding simple F0 modulations. In !Xóõ, a language, tones combine high or low F0 with multiple types, including harsh, breathy, and epiglottalized voice, creating a complex system where voice quality cues are as perceptually salient as pitch height. This contrasts with purely pitch-based systems, highlighting how laryngeal control can bundle phonatory features to expand tonal inventories.

Contour and register tones

Contour tones involve changes in pitch height within a single , creating dynamic patterns such as rising, falling, or rising-falling shapes that distinguish lexical meaning. These contours are phonemically contrastive, where the direction and extent of the pitch movement serve as the primary cue for differentiation. For instance, in , the tonal system includes a rising tone (second tone), a falling-rising tone (third tone), and a high-falling tone (fourth tone), each realized as a specific (F0) trajectory over the syllable duration. Register tones, in contrast, feature relatively stable pitch levels throughout the , typically categorized into high and low registers that may also correlate with differences, such as modal versus breathy or . This stability emphasizes pitch height over movement, with the high register produced at elevated F0 levels using clear voicing, while the low register involves lower F0 and often non-modal for added contrast. In , a variety, the tones are divided into yin (high-register) and yang (low-register) categories, where the low-register tones incorporate breathy to enhance the perceptual distinction from high-register counterparts. Many tonal languages employ hybrid systems that integrate both contour and register tones, allowing for a richer inventory by combining pitch shapes with register distinctions. Thai exemplifies this approach with its five tones: a mid-level tone, a low falling contour, a high rising contour, a falling contour, and a high falling contour, where contours are modulated across high and low registers to create phonemic oppositions. Phonetically, contour tones manifest as varying F0 trajectories—such as gradual rises or sharp falls—spanning the syllable's temporal extent, whereas register tones exhibit sustained F0 plateaus with minimal deviation, facilitating their perceptual separation in speech. Diachronically, contour tones in certain dialects often undergo simplification, evolving into simpler register tones as pitch movements flatten into level contrasts, a process driven by phonological pressures favoring perceptual clarity in rapid speech.

Tone levels and contours

In tone languages, tones are often realized as distinct pitch levels, ranging from simple binary systems to more elaborate multi-level inventories. Many African languages, such as Yoruba, feature a basic three-level system comprising high (H), mid (M), and low (L) tones, where these levels contrast lexically on syllables to distinguish meaning. In contrast, more complex systems can incorporate five or more levels, often organized into multiple registers; for instance, certain varieties of Zhuang, a Tai language spoken in southern , exhibit up to eight tones differentiated by pitch height and register, allowing for intricate lexical contrasts. Beyond simple levels, tones frequently manifest as contours, involving dynamic pitch movements within a single syllable, such as rising, falling, or more elaborate patterns. In Mandarin (often termed ), the third tone is a characteristic falling-rising contour, starting at mid pitch, dipping low, and then rising, which serves to contrast with level or monotonic tones. African languages commonly feature bitonal contours, where two pitch levels (typically high and low) combine on one syllable through the docking of a secondary tone to a primary one, as seen in languages like Igbo, where such contours arise from phonological rules associating floating tones to tone-bearing units. The structural unit to which tones attach, known as the tone-bearing unit (TBU), is most commonly the in the majority of tone languages, enabling precise mapping of pitch to segmental structure. However, in some systems, the mora—a sub-syllabic timing unit—serves as the TBU, as in Kabiye (a Gur language of ), where tonal contrasts align with moraic structure rather than full syllables. Less frequently, tones may operate at the word level as a prosodic domain, though this is atypical and often interacts with syllable-based assignment. For analysis, tones are perceptually scaled to a standardized pitch range to facilitate cross-linguistic comparison, particularly in African tonology, where a 1–5 numerical scale is conventional: 1 represents the lowest pitch, 5 the highest, with intermediate values (2–4) capturing mid levels or contours. This scaling abstracts phonetic pitch (measured in Hz) into relative categories, aiding transcription and phonological modeling. Analyzing tone levels and contours presents challenges, including the handling of floating tones—unassociated pitch specifications that influence adjacent tones without a dedicated TBU—and downstep effects, where a high tone is phonetically lowered following a low tone due to an intervening floating low, creating terraced pitch registers. These phenomena require careful phonetic verification to distinguish underlying representations from surface realizations.

Classification of tones

Lexical versus grammatical tones

In , tones are classified based on their primary role in conveying meaning, with lexical tones serving to differentiate the meanings of words or morphemes, while grammatical tones indicate inflectional or derivational categories such as tense, aspect, number, or case. Lexical tones are integral to the phonological specification of , often forming part of the underlying representation of roots or stems. For instance, in , an Athabaskan language, high and low tones contrast lexical items, such as distinguishing the noun for "" (with a high tone on the first ) from other semantically related terms through tonal specification on stems. Grammatical tones, in contrast, function as non-concatenative morphemes that modify existing tonal patterns to signal syntactic or morphological features, typically operating across words or phrases rather than being tied to individual lexical items. These tones are often replacive or shifting, altering the tone of a base form according to rule-governed patterns. A representative example occurs in many , where tone shifts mark number agreement; for instance, in Shona, singular and plural forms of certain nouns are distinguished solely by the placement or height of tones, with low tones typically associating with singulars and high tones spreading to indicate plurals. Many tone languages exhibit mixed systems where both lexical and grammatical tones coexist, sometimes interacting such that grammatical processes override or suppress lexical specifications. In Igbo, a Niger-Congo , lexical tones on nouns can be overwritten by low tones in certain syntactic constructions, such as questions, where grammatical tone marking takes precedence to convey interrogative force. This override highlights the hierarchical role of grammatical tones in sentence-level meaning. A key distinction in predictability arises from their functional roles: lexical tones are generally arbitrary, with their distribution across morphemes lacking systematic correlation to semantic content and requiring rote memorization in . Grammatical tones, however, follow more rule-based patterns, often involving spreading, deletion, or insertion triggered by morphological or syntactic contexts, making them more predictable once the rules are known. For example, in Somali, a Cushitic , tone distinguishes through consistent shifts: the singular form díbi () bears a high tone on the first , while the plural dibí shifts the high tone to the final , following a predictable tonal polarity rule for masculine nouns.

Word versus syllable tones

In tonal languages, the primary distinction between syllable tones and word tones lies in the phonological domain to which tones are assigned and realized. Syllable tones, prevalent in most Asian tonal languages such as and Vietnamese, associate a distinct tone with each individual , allowing for independent pitch specifications across multisyllabic words. For instance, in Mandarin, disyllabic words like māma (mother) combine two high-level tones, one per , without altering the inherent tonal identity of either component. Word tones, by contrast, are assigned to the word as a unit and typically realized on a single prominent , often the stressed or final one, rather than distributing across all syllables. This pattern is characteristic of certain North American indigenous languages, including like Western and , where lexical tones—high or low—are linked to the verb stem, the prosodically strong element within the word. In these systems, additional syllables in the word do not bear independent tones but may undergo assimilation or remain toneless, unifying the pitch contour over the entire . The choice between syllable and word tones has significant implications for morphology, particularly in processes like and derivation. tones facilitate flexibility in , as each retains its autonomous tone, enabling straightforward combinations in languages like Thai without mandatory tonal adjustments at boundaries. In contrast, word tones are closely tied to stress and prosodic prominence, which can constrain morphological operations; for example, in , tone assignment to the stem influences verb conjugation patterns, where affixes may trigger tone shifts but do not introduce new tonal specifications. Rare cases of tone assignment at the foot level—groupings of syllables forming a intermediate between and word—appear in some , such as certain Oto-Manguean varieties like , where tones may align with iambic or trochaic feet to encode lexical contrasts. These systems blend and word-level properties, with tones potentially spreading across foot boundaries. A key analytical challenge in distinguishing these domains involves tone spreading, where a tone from one extends to adjacent or the entire word, blurring the boundary between independent tones and holistic word tones. In like Shona, for example, a high tone on an initial may spread rightward to fill toneless , creating word-level contours that mimic unified assignment. Such processes require careful phonetic to determine underlying representations, as spreading can obscure whether tones are inherently syllabic or word-based.

Variation in tone inventories

Tone inventories in languages vary widely in size and complexity, ranging from simple systems with as few as two contrastive tones to elaborate ones with many more. Simple systems typically feature a binary contrast between high and low tones, as seen in many register-tone languages such as Ibibio, a Niger-Congo language where high and low tones distinguish lexical items without intermediate levels or contours. These two-tone systems are common in parts of and the , providing a basic pitch distinction that suffices for lexical and grammatical functions. In contrast, complex tone systems can include up to eight or more distinct tones, often combining level tones with contours and registers for greater phonological capacity. For example, some , part of the Sino-Tibetan family, exhibit intricate inventories with four or more tones, including rising, falling, and level varieties that interact with phonation types like . Such complexity allows for dense lexical differentiation in syllable-timed languages. The number of tones in a language's inventory is influenced by historical processes like mergers, where distinct tones converge over time due to phonetic instability, and areal effects, where proximity to neighboring tonal languages promotes the adoption or retention of additional contrasts. Tone density, measured by the proportion of minimal pairs where tone alone determines meaning, also varies across language families. In like Mandarin, tone plays a critical role, with a high percentage of vocabulary items forming tonal minimal pairs (e.g., over 60% of syllables in dictionaries show tone-based distinctions). In Niger-Congo languages, density is more variable, ranging from low in some where tone serves primarily grammatical roles to higher in others like Igala, though generally fewer lexical minimal pairs than in Asian tonal systems. Early linguistic descriptions overestimated the maximum number of tones possible, suggesting inventories beyond ten based on impressionistic analyses, but these have been revised by modern acoustic studies. Contemporary research using (F0) measurements and perceptual experiments indicates human listeners face challenges distinguishing more than 5-7 distinct tones reliably, due to limits in pitch categorization and discriminability. This perceptual ceiling explains the rarity of ultra-complex systems and underscores why many languages stabilize around fewer contrasts despite historical potential for expansion.

Tonal alternations

Tone sandhi

is a phonological process in tonal languages whereby the realization of a lexical tone on a is modified due to the influence of adjacent tones, serving as an assimilatory mechanism to facilitate smoother prosodic flow. This contextual alternation is prevalent across diverse language families, including Sino-Tibetan, Niger-Congo, and Otomanguean, and can involve changes in tone height, contour shape, or even tone deletion. A classic example occurs in , where the third tone—a low-dipping contour—undergoes regressive and surfaces as a high-rising second tone when followed by another third tone, as in the greeting nǐ hǎo realized as [ni² xɑʊ̯³⁵] 'hello' rather than the underlying [ni³ xɑʊ̯³¹⁴]. This rule applies productively across bisyllabic and longer sequences, prioritizing euphony by avoiding consecutive low starts. In contrast, Yoruba, a register tone language, features progressive spreading where a high (H) tone on a can extend to a following low (L)-toned object noun, yielding an H-H sequence and altering the original L tone in verb-object constructions. Tone sandhi exhibits directionality, classified as progressive (left-to-right influence, often left-dominant) or regressive (right-to-left, right-dominant). Right-dominant systems predominate in Chinese dialects, where the final tone in a domain resists change and triggers alterations in preceding tones, as seen in the leftward propagation of contours in Shanghai Wu. Left-dominant patterns, involving rightward tone spreading, appear in some , such as in tonal displacement rules where an initial H tone aligns and extends minimally to adjacent syllables without full assimilation. Common mechanisms include tone spreading (extension to neighbors), fusion (merging of adjacent contours into a single realization), and deletion (omission of a tone in favor of the dominant one), each conditioned by prosodic boundaries or lexical categories. Psycholinguistic research confirms that native speakers treat as rule-governed and productive, applying it to nonce words in experimental tasks like wug tests; for instance, Mandarin speakers consistently alter novel third-tone sequences to second-tone forms, indicating internalized phonological knowledge rather than rote lexical storage. Recent computational models further elucidate these processes, employing neural architectures to predict outcomes in real-time , such as simulating incomplete neutralization in Mandarin third-tone contexts where residual low cues persist despite surface changes, thereby modeling human perceptual tolerances.

Tone terracing

Tone terracing is a phonetic phenomenon observed in many tone languages, characterized by the progressive, stepwise lowering of high (or mid) tones following low tones, resulting in a series of descending pitch "terraces" rather than a continuous downdrift. This creates a terraced-level tone system where each high tone after a low is realized at a lower absolute pitch level than preceding highs, while low tones remain relatively stable in pitch. The effect is cumulative, compressing the pitch range over the and often conditioned by syntactic or grammatical structures. The primary mechanism underlying tone terracing is automatic downstep, where a low tone—either realized or floating—triggers the pitch depression of subsequent high tones. This can occur through anticipatory lowering or the influence of an unassociated (floating) low tone that links to a following high, effectively registering it at a new, lower level. In contrast to non-automatic downstep, which may involve lexical or morphological triggers, automatic downstep in terracing is a post-lexical process driven by sequential low-high interactions. Notation for tone terracing in linguistic descriptions typically employs the exclamation mark (!) to indicate downstep, as in sequences like H L H! where the second high is downstepped relative to the first. In the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), this is more formally represented with a superscript down arrow (ꜜ) before the affected tone, such as ꜜH for a downstepped high tone. Acoustic evidence for tone terracing comes from fundamental frequency (F0) measurements, which reveal a sustained depression in the pitch range of high tones following lows, with partial resets at low tones but no further lowering of lows themselves. For instance, in sequences like high-low-high-high, F0 values for the second and third highs are typically 15-25% lower than the initial high, establishing distinct terrace levels without smooth interpolation. This phenomenon is widespread across African language families, particularly Niger-Congo and Bantu, as seen in Akan where lexical low tones induce stepwise lowering of subsequent highs, forming terraces over noun phrases. Similarly, in !Xhosa, automatic downstep after low tones creates terraced contours in stems and clitics. While less common outside , isolated instances appear in some Austronesian languages like Paicî, where downstep produces comparable pitch compression.

Other tonal modifications

In tonal languages, emphasis or focus can trigger modifications to tone realization, often through pitch expansion or raising to enhance prominence. For instance, in , contrastive focus on a syllable bearing the low dipping tone 3 (T3) results in an elevated (F0) trajectory, shifting it toward a higher register and making it perceptually more similar to tone 2 (rising) or even tone 1 (high level). This pitch raising serves to mark the focused element without altering the underlying lexical tone category, as demonstrated in production experiments where focused T3 syllables exhibit significantly higher F0 peaks compared to their non-focused counterparts. Similar effects occur in other , where focus-induced raising prevents tonal compression in prosodic contexts. Loanword adaptation in tonal languages frequently involves assigning tones to syllables from non-tonal source languages to fit the host . In , English s are nativized by mapping the primary stressed to a high-level or high-rising tone (typically tone 1 or 2), while secondary stressed or unstressed s receive mid-level (tone 3) or low tones, reflecting the language's six-tone inventory. This stress-to-tone correspondence preserves perceptual salience, as seen in adaptations like "" becoming /tɛk̚˥ si˨/ with high tone on the stressed first . Early borrowings from the 19th-20th centuries further show integration via "changed tones," where rising variants replace base tones to signal lexical novelty. Dialectal variations often manifest as tone splits, mergers, or differing realizations within the same . In , Beijing and varieties exhibit distinct acoustic profiles for tone 3 , a rule changing consecutive low tones to rising ones; Beijing speakers produce a more categorical shift to a full tone 2 contour, whereas speakers realize a half-tone 2 with shallower F0 excursion and longer duration. These differences arise from historical substrate influences and sociolinguistic divergence since the mid-20th century, affecting intelligibility in cross-dialect communication. Such variations highlight how geographical separation can lead to gradual tone mergers in peripheral dialects, reducing inventories from the standard four tones. Pathological conditions like can disrupt tone processing in speakers of tonal languages, often resulting in tone loss, substitutions, or reduced contrastivity. In Mandarin-speaking individuals with and co-occurring , production errors include tone lowering or flattening, with accuracy rates dropping to below 50% for low tones like T3, as vowels and tones interact in motor planning deficits. Perception studies similarly reveal impaired of tonal contrasts, particularly rising versus falling tones, linked to left-hemisphere lesions affecting auditory-phonetic integration. These findings underscore tone's vulnerability in neurological impairment, contrasting with relative sparing in non-tonal languages. Emerging acoustic research in the has investigated environmental influences on tone realization, revealing subtle effects from and altitude. A 2023 corpus study of over 100 Chinese languages demonstrated that lower promotes breathier , which expands the perceptual space for multiple tonal contrasts, leading to larger tone inventories in drier high-altitude regions like the . Altitude-related lower air density may further elevate F0 baselines due to physiological adjustments in vocal tract , though direct impacts on individual tone contours remain understudied. These findings suggest adaptive tonogenesis tied to ecological niches, with implications for modeling tone stability in changing climates.

Functions of tone

Lexical differentiation

In tonal languages, lexical tones play a phoneme-like role by distinguishing the meanings of otherwise identical syllables, creating minimal pairs that are essential for vocabulary comprehension. For instance, in Vietnamese, the syllable ma with a level tone means "ghost," a falling tone means "but," a rising tone means "" or "cheek," a falling-rising tone means "," a rising-broken tone means "," and a low falling tone means " seedling." This contrastive function underscores the integral of tones in lexical , where altering the pitch contour can completely change a word's . Cognitive processing of lexical tones begins early in first-language acquisition among speakers of tonal languages. Infants demonstrate the ability to discriminate between lexical tone contrasts as young as 4 to 6 months of age, with no observed decline in performance at these stages, indicating an innate sensitivity that supports rapid vocabulary building. This early perceptual attunement allows young learners to map tones to specific lexical items, facilitating the development of a robust . For second-language learners from non-tonal backgrounds, mastering lexical tones presents substantial challenges that extend to development. Non-native speakers often struggle with of tone contrasts, leading to difficulties in and , as tones must be accurately decoded alongside segmental features in orthographies that mark them explicitly. These perceptual hurdles can impede overall proficiency, requiring targeted training to achieve native-like accuracy in lexical differentiation. Quantitative evidence of tone's lexical impact is evident in languages with large tone inventories, such as those in the Hmong-Mien family. Hmong languages feature up to eight distinct tones, enabling extensive contrasts in dictionaries that catalog thousands of vocabulary items reliant on these distinctions for disambiguation. For example, White Hmong dictionaries highlight how tones differentiate roots across semantic domains, from terms to agricultural vocabulary, amplifying the language's expressive capacity. Sociolinguistically, lexical tone variations across serve as markers of regional or group identity, influencing how speakers signal affiliation. In bidialectal contexts, such as speakers navigating multiple varieties of a tonal , the acoustic realization of tones shifts to align with the targeted , reinforcing social boundaries and ethnic distinctions through subtle pitch adjustments. This role positions lexical tones not only as tools for lexical contrast but also as subtle indicators of community membership in diverse linguistic landscapes.

Grammatical and syntactic roles

In tonal languages, tones can serve grammatical and syntactic functions by signaling categories such as tense, aspect, focus, or agreement, often through shifts, spreading, or assignment that operate beyond lexical distinctions. These roles typically involve non-lexical tones—floating or underlying tones that associate with specific morphemes or syntactic positions to mark inflectional or derivational processes. Unlike lexical tones, which distinguish word meanings, grammatical tones interact with sentence structure to convey relational , such as temporal relations or prominence. Tone frequently marks tense and aspect through spreading or contour changes on verbal elements. In Grebo, a language spoken in , low tone from the verb spreads rightward to the tense marker, altering its realization within the ; for instance, a low tone on the verb can associate with the suffix, distinguishing it from present forms. Similarly, in San Maka, an Eastern Mande language of the , tone alone differentiates neutral and perfective aspects on s, as in dāā (neutral 'to come') versus dāà (perfective 'came'), where a falling tone signals completion. Syntactic functions of tone include marking focus, topic, or agreement, often by attracting high tones to focused elements or assigning specific melodies to constituents. In Igbo, a Niger-Congo language of Nigeria, a high tone can be inserted or shifted to the focused verb or noun phrase, as in constructions where tonal prominence highlights the object for emphasis, distinguishing it from unmarked syntax. For object agreement, tone participates in verb morphology in languages like Ùhànmì (Ikaram), where specific tone patterns on the verb align with subject-object relations, reinforcing agreement without segmental changes. In , tone copying contributes to derivational processes by replicating the base tone melody to the reduplicant, thereby deriving new grammatical forms such as intensives or distributives. In Thai, total copies both segments and tones from the base word, as in sàp-sàp (mid tone repeated for 'somewhat ten'), where the tonal identity preserves the base meaning while adding iterative or attenuative derivation. This process ensures prosodic , with the copied tone associating fully to the reduplicated to signal the grammatical modification. Tone can reinforce syntactic structure, including , by aligning pitch contours with phrasal boundaries or dependencies in tone-dominant s. In Akan, a Kwa of , downstepped tones mark phrase-final positions, supporting rigid subject-verb-object order by prosodically delimiting constituents and preventing ambiguity in complex sentences. Such interactions help maintain syntactic coherence, where tonal resets or spreads cue hierarchical relations beyond linear sequencing. Typologically, grammatical tone is more prevalent in African languages than in Asian ones, where tones are predominantly lexical and segmentally conditioned. In , over 60% of Niger-Congo and employ tone for grammatical marking, such as aspect or focus, reflecting areal and genetic patterns. In contrast, East and Southeast Asian tone languages, like those in the Sino-Tibetan and Austroasiatic families, rarely use tone grammatically, favoring static contour systems tied to lexical identity. This distribution highlights Africa's higher incidence of floating tones for functional roles.

Interaction with morphology

In tonal languages, tone frequently interacts with morphological processes, serving as a key mechanism for marking grammatical categories through changes in pitch patterns on , stems, or affixes. This integration can be inflectional, where tone alternates to indicate features like number, case, or tense without altering lexical meaning, or derivational, where new tones create words with shifted semantic roles, such as causatives or nominalizations. These interactions highlight tone's role as a morphological exponent, often overriding or layering upon lexical tones in complex ways. Inflectional tone is particularly prominent in families like Oto-Manguean, where tone paradigms encode intricate verbal inflections for , tense, aspect, and direction. For instance, in Amuzgo, verb roots undergo tonal overwriting in specific paradigm cells; a root with a mid tone might shift to high or low to mark first-person singular future, creating allomorphic tonal patterns that resolve conflicts through dominance hierarchies, where inflectional tones prevail over lexical ones. Similarly, in some such as certain varieties, tone alternations on nouns signal case or number, with high tones appearing on possessed forms to distinguish singular from , as seen in constructs where base low tones flip to high under possessive prefixes. These systems demonstrate tone's efficiency in compactly encoding morphology in agglutinative or fusional structures. Derivational tone, by contrast, introduces new pitch contours via affixes or internal changes to derive novel lexical items, often in verb derivations. In of the Tibeto-Burman branch, such as certain Kuki-Chin varieties, causatives are formed by tone shifts on the root; for example, a low-tone like dò 'drink' becomes a high-tone că 'cause to drink' or 'feed,' altering the root's inherent tone while preserving segmental structure. This process exemplifies how tone acts as a derivational , interacting with affixation to expand the without adding segments, a common strategy in isolating-to-synthetic language types within the family. In polysynthetic languages like those of the Athabaskan family, tone integrates deeply with agglutinative morphology, where verb complexes incorporate multiple prefixes and suffixes around a tonal stem. In languages such as Athabaskan, the stem tone (high or low) interacts with classifiers and aspectual morphemes, sometimes triggering tonal flips or spreading in the template; for example, a high-tone stem may lower under certain direct object prefixes to mark transitivity modes, embedding tone within the hierarchical structure. This agglutinative use of tone underscores its role in disambiguating complex word forms in highly synthetic systems. Theoretical models in treat tone as an inflectional feature within morphological frameworks, such as Distributed Morphology, where tonal exponents are inserted post-syntactically to realize abstract features like plurality or causation, often resolving conflicts via optimality constraints or cyclicity. Larry Hyman's hierarchical model posits layers of tone application—base (lexical), derivational, then inflectional—with higher layers overriding lower ones, as in Amuzgo where inflectional tones dominate in paradigm cells. Recent studies from the 2020s have extended these insights to contact varieties, including creoles, where substrate tone systems influence morphological prosody. In Afro-Caribbean creoles like Saramaccan, inherited tonal morphology from Gbe substrates marks aspectual inflections via high-tone suffixes on verbs, resisting simplification and maintaining functional in derivation and agreement, as evidenced in prosodic analyses showing areal retention of tone for grammatical roles.

Representation of tone

Phonetic notation systems

The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) provides standardized diacritics for transcribing tone levels and contours, enabling precise phonetic representation of pitch variations. For level tones, high tone is marked with an (e.g., á), low tone with a (e.g., à), mid tone often unmarked or with a macron (ā), extra-high with a double acute (a̋), and extra-low with a double grave (à). Contour tones are indicated by combining diacritics, such as a for rising (ǎ) or a for falling (â), placed above the ; these symbols capture the dynamic pitch movement central to contour tones. An alternative system within the IPA uses Chao tone letters, developed by linguist in the and formally adopted by the in 1989. These vertical strokes represent a five-level pitch scale, with ˥ for extra-high level, ˦ for high level, ˧ for mid level, ˨ for low level, and ˩ for extra-low level; contours are formed by ligatures, such as ˥˩ for high falling or ˨˦ for low rising. This notation excels in depicting complex contours abstractly and is particularly suited for languages with intricate tone systems, offering greater precision than simple diacritics for phonetic detail. Comparative notation systems reflect regional linguistic traditions, notably the Africanist and Sinologist approaches. In the Africanist convention, common in Bantu and Niger-Congo studies, tones are numbered from high (1) to low (5), with contours shown sequentially (e.g., 13 for rising); this prioritizes register tones and downstep phenomena. Conversely, the Sinologist system, influenced by Chao's work on , numbers from high (5) to low (1), using pairs for contours (e.g., 35 for rising), emphasizing precise pitch height and dynamic shapes. These differences arise from varying emphases on tone typology but can lead to inconsistencies in cross-linguistic transcription. Software tools like facilitate the analysis and visualization of tone through (F0) extraction, allowing linguists to plot pitch contours from audio recordings for empirical verification of phonetic notations. Praat's pitch tracking algorithms generate F0 curves, enabling quantitative assessment of tone realization and aiding in the refinement of transcriptions. The historical evolution of tone notation began in the early with accents and numerals, transitioning to formalized systems like Chao's letters and IPA diacritics by mid-century; modern support since the 1990s has standardized digital rendering of these symbols across platforms. Prior to 1989, the IPA relied on simpler "horizontal and oblique accents" for tones, which were less adept at contours, prompting the integration of Chao's design for enhanced universality.

Orthographic conventions

Orthographic conventions for tonal languages adapt writing systems to represent pitch distinctions essential for meaning, often employing s, symbols, or modifications to existing scripts. In languages using Latin-based alphabets, diacritic systems commonly place accents or marks directly on vowels to indicate tones, as seen in Vietnamese, where the Quốc ngữ uses six distinct tone marks to denote its six tones: level (no mark, e.g., ma), rising (acute ´, e.g., ), falling (grave `, e.g., ), falling-rising (hook above ̉, e.g., mả), rising (tilde ~, e.g., ), and falling (dot below ̣, e.g., mạ). This system, developed in the by European missionaries and standardized in the , ensures tones are visually integrated into syllables without altering the base Latin letters. For abugida or syllabary-based scripts, tone representation involves dedicated symbols overlaid on or . In Thai, the script uses four tone marks—mai èk (low tone, ่), mai thó (falling tone, ้), mai trì (high tone, ๊), and mai chattawá (rising tone, ๋)—positioned above the baseline after the initial or component of a . These marks interact with the inherent tone classes of (high, mid, low) and to produce one of five tones, a system refined during the script's creation in the 13th century under King Ramkhamhaeng. Romanization systems for tonal languages like Chinese highlight challenges in consistency, particularly when adapting tones to for non-native speakers. Hanyu Pinyin, the official romanization adopted in since 1958, uses diacritics on vowels (e.g., for high level tone, for rising) to mark four main tones plus a neutral tone, promoting intuitive pronunciation for global use. In contrast, the earlier Wade-Giles system (prevalent until the mid-20th century) employs superscript numbers (e.g., ma¹ for high level, ma² for rising) and apostrophes for syllable separation, leading to inconsistencies such as different representations of the same tone across texts (e.g., Pinyin's vs. Wade-Giles' Peking). These variations complicate cross-referencing historical and modern materials. In African tonal languages, orthographies often extend Latin scripts with diacritics to capture tone, though non-Latin elements like tone bars—horizontal lines indicating pitch levels—appear in some standardized systems. For Igbo, a Niger-Congo with high, low, and mid tones, the uses acute accents (´) for high tones (e.g., ákwà 'cloth'), grave accents (`) for low tones (e.g., àkwà 'bed'), and no mark for mid tones, as established in the 1962 orthography by the Society for Promoting and Culture. This approach prioritizes simplicity in print, though full tone marking is often omitted in everyday writing to focus on high-low contrasts. Post-2000 reforms have emphasized standardization through international bodies like , which supports development for unwritten or under-documented tonal languages to preserve linguistic diversity. The organization's 2003 guide, Writing unwritten languages: a guide to the process, advocates participatory approaches to tone notation, recommending diacritics or simple symbols adaptable to digital tools while involving communities to balance readability and cultural fidelity. These efforts, aligned with the UN's Decade of Indigenous Languages (2022–2032), have influenced reforms in over 100 languages, promoting consistent tone representation in education and media.

Regional notation practices

In African tonal languages, notation practices often prioritize simplicity in everyday orthographies, with tones frequently omitted to avoid complexity, as seen in Twi (a dialect of Akan spoken in ), where standard writing systems do not mark high or low tones despite their phonemic role. In linguistic analyses and pedagogical materials for such languages, tones are instead represented using superscript numbers—typically 1 for high tone and 5 for low tone—or dots placed above (for high) or below (for low) the vowel, facilitating precise transcription without altering the base script. Across Asian tonal languages, notation is deeply integrated into the writing systems, reflecting the scripts' historical development. In Burmese, which employs an derived from Brahmi, tones are indicated inherently through the choice of consonants (e.g., voiced stops for creaky), vowels, and syllable structure, without specific diacritics for tones. This system, refined since the , avoids separate tone marks by embedding them in the syllable structure. In contrast, Vietnamese uses the Latin alphabet with explicit diacritics for its six tones: an (´) for rising tone (e.g., ), a (`) for falling tone (e.g., ), a (̉) for dipping tone (e.g., mả), a (~) for wavy tone (e.g., ), a dot below (̣) for heavy tone (e.g., mạ), and no mark for level tone (e.g., ma). In the , indigenous tonal languages adopt simplified notations suited to Latin-based orthographies, often focusing on a binary high-low contrast. For Yucatec Maya, spoken in the , high tone on long vowels is typically marked with an (e.g., káah for high tone), while low tone remains unmarked (e.g., kaah), emphasizing with doubled letters (aa, ee) as the primary distinction. This approach, standardized in modern Maya orthographies since the , balances with the language's tonal and length features, though some dialects exhibit variable tone realization. European languages with tonal elements, such as Norwegian, exhibit minimal notation practices due to the prosodic rather than lexical nature of their tones. Norwegian features two pitch accents (tone 1 and tone 2) that distinguish words in certain dialects, but standard and orthographies use no dedicated marks, relying instead on stress and for disambiguation. Linguistic transcriptions may employ diacritics like (à) for tone 1 or (â) for tone 2 in descriptive works, but these are rare in practical writing. Contemporary digital communication introduces challenges for tonal notation across regions, particularly with inconsistent font support for diacritics and non-Latin characters, which can lead to garbled representations of tones in emails, , or online resources for languages like Vietnamese or Burmese. Efforts by organizations like SIL International address this through Unicode-compliant fonts that better accommodate combining tone marks, though gaps persist in mobile and web platforms for lesser-resourced scripts.

Evolution of tone

Tonogenesis processes

Tonogenesis refers to the diachronic by which languages develop contrastive lexical tones from previously non-tonal phonological systems, often through the reanalysis of pitch perturbations caused by segmental features. This evolution typically transforms suprasegmental cues, such as (F0) variations, into phonemically distinctive elements that distinguish word meanings. The process unfolds in distinct stages, beginning with a proto-stage where pitch serves prosodic functions like emphasis or intonation but lacks lexical contrast. In subsequent stages, the or loss of consonants—particularly finals or initials—triggers systematic F0 changes that were initially allophonic. These pitch differences then undergo phonologization, becoming obligatory and contrastive tones independent of the original segments. A classic example is Vietnamese, where tonogenesis progressed from a pre-tonal monosyllabic stage with initial voicing contrasts conditioning pitch, through the loss of final stops (-p, -t, -k) and fricatives (-s, -h), yielding the modern system of six registers by around the 6th–12th centuries CE. Key triggers for tonogenesis include laryngeal and voicing properties of , which physiologically perturb F0. Voiceless or implosive stops tend to condition high or rising tones due to elevated pitch onset, while voiced stops and nasals promote low or falling tones through lowered F0. In Chinese tonogenesis from (circa 1250 BCE–200 CE), initial voiceless stops led to high level tones, voiced initials to low level tones, and final glottal stops to checked tones; this system split further in (6th–10th centuries CE) into the four modern Mandarin tones via additional mergers and splits. Acoustic pathways further explain these developments: voiced consonants reduce F0 via vocal fold vibration patterns, whereas voiceless or aspirated ones raise it through breathy or tense . Creaky voice, often linked to glottalized or implosive articulations, evolves into low-register tones by associating with irregular vibrations and lowered pitch, as seen in various Southeast Asian languages where glottal features phonologize into falling contours. Recent research has illuminated tonogenesis in through phylogenetic analyses and databases of evolutionary events. A 2023 study across 40 languages, including multiple Austroasiatic branches, revised tonogenesis models by identifying diverse pathways like phonation contrasts contributing to tone emergence, with genetic evidence suggesting independent tonal innovations post-dispersal from a non-tonal around 4,000–5,000 years ago. Additionally, a 2025 database documents 259 tonogenetic events from 104 languages, highlighting recurrent patterns in Austroasiatic such as register splits from initial nasals, supported by comparative .

Tone as an areal phenomenon

Tone in linguistics often emerges and spreads as an areal , where languages from distinct genetic families develop similar tonal systems through prolonged contact rather than shared ancestry. This diffusion is evident in linguistic areas or Sprachbünde, regions where geographic proximity fosters the exchange of phonological features among unrelated languages. For instance, in the Mesoamerican linguistic area, spanning central to northern , tone serves as a shared prosodic trait across families like Oto-Manguean, Mayan, and Uto-Aztecan, with complex tonal inventories and morphosyntactically conditioned tone changes appearing as areal innovations rather than inherited traits. Such patterns highlight how tone can permeate a region through bilingual interactions, independent of genetic relatedness. In East and , tonal systems exemplify areal diffusion, particularly through the influence of on neighboring families. The , encompassing Sino-Tibetan, Hmong-Mien, Kra-Dai, Austroasiatic, and Austronesian languages, features widespread tonality with up to six or more contrasts, attributed to historical contact rather than . Hmong-Mien languages, for example, adopted elaborate tonal registers likely under Sino-Tibetan substrate influence during migrations and interactions in southern and , resulting in shared voice quality modulations integrated into tone systems. This areal spread is further evidenced by phylogenetic analyses showing convergent tonogenesis across these families, driven by millennia of bilingualism in the region. Similar dynamics occur in , where tone diffuses across the continent's diverse families via contact zones. In , Niger-Congo languages, particularly Bantu branches, have influenced , introducing or reinforcing tonal contrasts in click-heavy systems through substrate effects in bilingual communities. For example, eastern varieties exhibit two-to-four level tones that align with areal patterns from neighboring Niger-Congo speakers, suggesting borrowing via long-term coexistence in the Kalahari region. These interactions underscore tone's role in phonological convergence, where non-tonal or weakly tonal proto-systems acquire full through exposure. Mechanisms of tonal adoption in contact scenarios typically involve substrate influence, where speakers of a dominant tonal shift to a recipient , carrying over prosodic features, and bilingualism, which facilitates gradual integration of tones into the lexicon. In substrate cases, retreating populations imprint tonal patterns onto superstrate languages, as seen in or dialect formation; bilingual speakers, meanwhile, may hyperadapt tones during , leading to systemic changes over generations. However, contact can also prompt tone loss, as in Chinese, where breathy voice on low-register tones is diminishing among younger speakers due to prestige-driven shift toward non-breathy Standard Mandarin, illustrating reversal of areal diffusion. Recent research on in contact zones further illuminates these processes, revealing tonal diversity as a product of intense . hosts over 800 languages across multiple families, with tones appearing in isolates and Trans-New Guinea phyla near Austronesian borders, likely diffused through trade and settlement. A 2023 workshop on tonal diachrony highlighted how bilingualism in these zones acquires tones via contact, with ongoing studies documenting hybrid systems in highland-lowland interfaces. This areal tonality, distinct from internal tonogenesis, emphasizes contact's role in shaping prosody amid extreme diversity.

Tonal languages worldwide

African tonal languages

Sub-Saharan Africa hosts over 1,000 tonal languages, with the vast majority belonging to the Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan phyla, making tone a defining phonological feature across these families. Niger-Congo languages, which include more than 900 members such as the widespread Bantu subgroup, predominantly employ tone for lexical and grammatical distinctions, while Nilo-Saharan languages exhibit similar reliance on pitch contrasts, though with greater internal variation. This prevalence underscores Africa's status as a hotspot for tonal diversity, where tone systems integrate deeply with morphology and syntax in everyday communication. Two-level tone systems, typically high and low, are the most common in African languages, often featuring extensive —contextual alternations where tones shift based on neighboring elements—and terracing, a stepwise pitch descent known as downstep. In Wolof, a Niger-Congo spoken in , the system revolves around a high-low opposition with prominent terracing, where successive high tones are lowered relative to prior highs, creating a cascading effect in phrases. These features enable nuanced prosodic structures, distinguishing African tones from the contour-heavy systems prevalent elsewhere, and highlight how pitch interacts dynamically in connected speech. Yoruba, a Yoruboid language of the Niger-Congo family, exemplifies a three-tone system—high, mid, and low—that serves primarily lexical functions, where minimal pairs like òkè (low-high: "hill") and oké (mid-high: "roof") rely on tone for differentiation. In Zulu, a Bantu , tone interacts with specific consonants called depressors (such as voiced obstruents), which inherently lower the pitch of following tones, transforming a high tone into a rising or depressed variant and contributing to overall melodic contour. These examples illustrate how tone in African languages not only marks word meaning but also responds to segmental influences, enhancing expressive range. Tonal diversity extends to the of , where register tones—level pitches spanning syllables—coexist with complex click consonants, as seen in , which employs a four-register system to form six primary citation melodies. This register-based approach contrasts with the more stepwise systems in Niger-Congo, adding to the continent's phonological richness. In African oral traditions and , tone plays a pivotal role, bridging speech and performance through surrogate systems like talking , where pitch patterns encode linguistic tones to convey messages or narratives, as in Akan drumming that mirrors tonal for rhythmic fidelity. Such integration fosters cultural continuity, allowing tone to shape , proverbs, and songs in ways that preserve linguistic identity.

Asian tonal languages

Asia hosts a substantial proportion of the world's tonal languages, with estimates suggesting that around half of all tonal languages are spoken in the region, particularly concentrated in . Tonal systems in these languages are predominantly syllable-based, where pitch contours distinguish lexical meaning, and they often feature complex contour tones that rise, fall, or combine in intricate patterns. This has developed through historical processes like tonogenesis, where earlier phonetic distinctions evolved into contrastive tones, though the mechanisms are explored in detail elsewhere. The Sino-Tibetan language family exemplifies tonal diversity in , with languages exhibiting varying numbers of tones tied to structure. Standard , a Sinitic language within this family, contrasts four main tones: a high level tone (55), a rising tone (35), a dipping or low-rising tone (214), and a high-falling tone (51), alongside a neutral tone that shortens and de-stresses s. In contrast, , another Sinitic variety, displays greater complexity with six primary tones—high level, high rising, mid level, low falling, low rising, and low level—plus three checked tones (high, mid, and low) that occur on s ending in stops, resulting in up to nine tonal contrasts depending on analysis. Tibetan languages, also Sino-Tibetan, present a more register-based system resembling pitch accent, where distinguishes two registers (high and low) that interact with aspiration and to create four effective tone categories on monosyllables. These variations highlight how tonal inventories can range from simple to highly elaborated within the same family, influencing prosody and lexical differentiation. The Tai-Kadai family, prominent in , features robust contour tones, as seen in Thai, which has five tones: mid (33), low (21), falling (53), high (45), and rising (31), with tone assignment determined by syllable structure and historical voicing. Languages in the Hmong-Mien family push tonal complexity further, often with up to eight or more contrasts; for instance, White Hmong distinguishes seven tones, including high (45), mid (33), low (22), high-falling (51), mid-rising (35), low-falling (31), and checked variants, where phonation types like breathiness or creakiness register additional distinctions. Vietnamese, an Austroasiatic language heavily influenced by prolonged contact with tonal systems during Chinese domination and later French colonial rule—which affected its romanized but not the core tones—employs six tones: level (33), rising (45), falling (51), dipping (214), rising-háck (323), and falling-breathy (31), creating a rich system of registers that can alter word meaning dramatically. These examples underscore the prevalence of contour-heavy tones in Asian families, often exceeding simple level contrasts found elsewhere. Urbanization and in modern Asian contexts have led to observable tone shifts in certain varieties. In , where English, Mandarin, and southern Chinese dialects coexist, Singaporean Teochew exhibits tonal mergers and raised pitches compared to mainland varieties, with the high tone shifting upward and some contours simplifying due to substrate influences from Hokkien and English prosody. Similarly, Singapore Mandarin shows elevated tone values and reduced distinctions in the rising and dipping tones among younger speakers, reflecting contact-induced changes in a cosmopolitan setting. These shifts illustrate how contemporary can reshape traditional tonal systems, potentially leading to simplification or in urban dialects.

American tonal languages

Tonal languages in the Americas are less prevalent than in or , comprising roughly 200 languages primarily in and the . The , the largest in , accounts for the bulk of these with approximately 177 tonal languages spoken across southern and . All exhibit lexical tone, a feature reconstructed to the with at least three tones. In the Amazon region of , tonal languages are sparser but include around 50 documented cases, often belonging to isolate families or small groups like the Ticuna-Yuquí isolate. These tonal systems contrast with global patterns by showing greater diversity in tone inventories within families but lower overall density outside specific areal clusters. Characteristics of American tonal languages frequently include simple two-tone systems (high and low), though more complex setups with contour tones or multiple level tones occur, particularly in Mesoamerican branches. , such as those in the Zapotecan subgroup, typically assign tones to entire words or syllables, where tone patterns distinguish lexical meanings; for instance, in Valley Zapotec, high and low tones on vowels can alter word identity. Amazonian tonal languages often feature restricted tone distribution, with tones limited to stressed syllables or word-initial positions, as seen in languages like Shipibo-Konibo, where high and low tones contrast minimally. Notable examples include Yucatec Maya, a Mayan language with high and low tones marked phonemically on vowels, though scholars debate whether its system constitutes full or a pitch accent due to tone's interaction with stress and length. In , stands out with one of the world's largest tone inventories, featuring over 10 contour and level tones that serve lexical functions. Some Quechua varieties in the exhibit tonal-like pitch contrasts in intonation, potentially influenced by areal contact, though they are primarily stress-accent languages. Tone also appears in contact-induced settings, such as creoles; Papiamentu, a -based creole spoken in the , employs lexical tone for contrasts like pápà '' versus pàpá 'daddy'. This feature likely derives from African substrates during colonial formation. Many American tonal languages face endangerment, with over half of Otomanguean varieties classified as vulnerable or moribund due to and Spanish/ dominance. efforts in the , including the U.S. government's 2024 10-Year National Plan on Native Language , support community programs for indigenous languages.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.