
This paper explores the prosodic patterns of complex DP structures in Xitsonga by looking at penultimate lengthening in DPs with marked and unmarked word orders of different types. We discuss the underlying syntactic structures and prosodic realizations of Xitsonga DPs. We are particularly interested in the way in which recursion applies in the Xitsonga DP, where it surfaces in DPs with multiple modifiers of the same or different categories that appear in fronted (i.e., pre-nominal) positions. We propose that in Xitsonga nominal constituents move to a left-periphery-like position within the DP domain and that this position matches to a focus-marked phonological phrase. This type of phonological phrase is forced to remain in the phonology even if the one-word phrase violates the Binarity constraint. We argue that the penultimate lengthening effects found in Xitsonga with the reordering of DP internal elements are best analyzed as showing sensitivity to this focus-marked phonological phrase.
DP, penultimate lengthening; recursion; Tsonga; Southern Bantu; DP; faithfulness to focus-marked phonological phrase, Southern Bantu, Language and Literature, recursion, Tsonga, P, faithfulness to focus-marked phonological phrase, penultimate lengthening
DP, penultimate lengthening; recursion; Tsonga; Southern Bantu; DP; faithfulness to focus-marked phonological phrase, Southern Bantu, Language and Literature, recursion, Tsonga, P, faithfulness to focus-marked phonological phrase, penultimate lengthening
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