Typological Features Template for Ewe
Revision as of 15:05, 19 November 2009 by Abigail Ayiglo (Talk | contribs)
| Feature | Description | ||
| Phonological Features | |||
| Vowel inventory | |||
| Vowel harmony | |||
| Consonant inventory | |||
| Tone | |||
| Syllable Structure | The two basic syllable structure in Ewe are CV and CCV. Where it is CCV, the second consonant in the the cluster is always a liquid. Where words borrowed in the language have consonants clusters other than the permissible one in the language, the cluster is broken by either deleting one of the consonants or inserting a vowel between the consonants in the cluster. Also, when a borrowed word has a coda in the last syllable of a word, the coda is deleted or a final vowel is added to the word]. | ||
| Morpho-syntactic Features | |||
| morphological classification (1) | |||
| morphological classification (2) | |||
| Nominal Phrases | |||
| syntactic structure | The linear order of the Ewe NP → N (Adj) Det. | ||
| nominal modification | |||
| nominal specification | |||
| possession | There are a number of ways in which possession is marked in Ewe. Where a possessive pronoun is used, the possessed noun is juxtaposed to the pronoun. For the first person pronoun, the possessed precedes the possessive pronoun. However, if a any noun other than a possessive pronoun is used, the possessive marker, ƒe, occurs after the possessor and before the possessed noun.However, if the possessed is a kingship term, the possessive marker, ƒe, is omitted. Here, the two nouns are juxtaposed to each other. | ||
| pronominal system | |||
| Verbal Phrases | |||
| word order | |||
| TAM | |||
| infinitival forms | |||
| verbal constructions | Adpositions | ||
| Complementation | |||
| Special Properties of [your language] |