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Reduplication: morphophonemics
المؤلف: Christine Jourdan and Rachel Selbach
المصدر: A Handbook Of Varieties Of English Phonology
الجزء والصفحة: 707-39
2024-04-27
70
Pijin makes room for reduplication as a productive pattern in the morphology of (primarily) verbs, where it can function to modify meaning or mood. It is also present in the substrate languages of the Solomon Islands, such that it remains to be seen whether the morphophonemic rules also correspond to those of the vernaculars. Reduplication may involve either full or partial reduplication of the first syllable.
The basic rule for verbal reduplication is to copy the first syllable of the verb and to prefix it to the root (e.g. sasave, sisiki, kiskis). However, contrary to what is happening in Bislama (Crowley, this volume), very rarely will speakers choose to duplicate a consonant cluster if it is in initial position. Instead, when the root starts with a cluster (a pattern predominantly found in the speech of young urbanites), speakers will copy the root’s first consonant and the first vowel only (e.g. fafraet, kakarae, sastap). It appears that in Pijin the more optimal reduplicant is maximally of the pattern CV. The same pattern holds for one-syllable verb roots containing a diphthong, where only the first vowel of the diphthong is reduplicated (e.g. dadae, fafaet). Interestingly, the coda is, however, retained in some other words whose roots-initial syllable is of the CVC pattern, such as in wanwan and kiskis.