Nordic Journal of African Studies (Dec 2017)

A Note on Bantu Extensions and Syntactic Word Formation

  • Jochen Zeller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.53228/njas.v26i4.77
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 4

Abstract

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Suffix order in Bantu is determined by two (sometimes conflicting) principles. According to the Mirror Principle, affix orders must reflect scope relations, while the CARP template requires suffixes to appear in a fixed linear order. This paper discusses examples from different Bantu languages where a particular affix order violates one of these principles, and it describes how these cases are analysed in two prominent syntactic theories of word formation. In Distributed Morphology, words are formed via syntactic head movement, but the linear order of affixes can be changed by morphological rules that apply post-syntactically. In an alternative approach, all possible suffix orders are derived by phrasal movement in the syntax. I show that the Bantu data support the Distributed Morphology approach, because in this theory, Mirror Principle effects follow directly from the strictly local nature of the syntactic process that derives complex words, viz. head movement.