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Bono dialect

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bono
Abron
Native toGhana, Ivory Coast
EthnicityBono
Native speakers
1.4 million (2013)[1]
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3abr
Glottologabro1238

Bono, also known as Abron, Brong, and Bono Twi, is a dialect within the Akan language continuum that is spoken by the Bono people.[2][3] Bono is spoken by approximately 1.2 million people in Ghana, primarily in the Bono Region, Bono East Region, and by over 300,000 in eastern Côte d'Ivoire.[4]

Relationship with other dialects of Akan

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Intelligibility can be difficult between the different dialects of Bono. For the most part, Bono is mutually intelligible with other dialects of Akan, but the degree of intelligibility varies with geographical distance. Most speakers of Bono are bidialectal in Asante.[5]

Bono and Wasa are the most divergent dialects of Akan. Along with Fante, Bono is also one of the most conservative, retaining features such as the third-person plural pronoun that have since been lost elsewhere.[6][5][7]

Differences from other dialects of Akan

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Phonological

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  • Bono tends to use /h/ where Asante has palatalized it to hy (/ɕ/) and hw (/ɕʷ/): cf. Bono hia vs. Asante hyia ("to meet").[6]
  • Bono has [l] and [r] in free variation, where Asante has only /r/ or only /l/. As Akan generally has [d] in complementary distribution with [r], there are some Bono words with [l], [r], and [d] in free variation, e.g. fiela/fiera/fieda ("Friday"). A similar process may be found in some varieties of Asante, e.g. akɔlaa/akɔraa/akɔdaa ("child").[6]
  • In most Akan dialects, the emphatic particle is pronounced with a low tone, whereas in Bono it is , with a high tone.[6]
  • Unlike other varieties of Akan, and most Kwa languages in general, which have nominal vowel prefixes, many Bono nouns have either a homorganic nasal prefix or no nasal prefix at all: cf. Bono pɔnkɔ vs. Asante ɔpɔnkɔ ("horse"). Conversely, while most dialects have lost the nominal vowel suffix, Bono as well as Asante have retained it: cf. Bono nsuo vs. Asante nsu ("water"). Asante is the only dialect to have retained both vowel prefix and suffix: cf. Bono wuo, Asante owuo, and Asante owu ("death").[6]

Grammatical

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  • The most characteristic feature of Bono is its use of the third-person plural pronoun , not found in any other Akan dialect. It was likely an old pronoun retained in Bono but not elsewhere in Akan.[6]
  • Akan subject markers are usually only used when a subject is not made explicit, and are only ever used alongside an explicit subject in emphatic sentences. However, in Bono, an explicit subject is almost always used alongside a subject marker, whether the sentence is emphatic or not: cf. Asante Kofi kɔe ("Kofi went", with explicit subject and without subject marker) and ɔkɔe ("He went", with subject marker) vs. Bono Kofi ɔkɔe (literally "Kofi he went", with explicit subject and subject marker). Similarly, Bono requires a possessor as well as a possessive pronoun, e.g. Kofi ne dan (literally "Kofi his house"), although this is a feature found in Fante and Akuapem.[6]
  • In Bono, the first-person singular prefixes me- reduce to a homorganic syllabic nasal when they occur immediately before a consonant, e.g. mbaeɛ ("I came"), whereas other Akan dialects do not reduce it, e.g. mebae ("I came").[6]
  • Bono does not distinguish the third-person singular animate ɔ- and inanimate ɛ- possessive prefixes common to other Akan dialects, instead using ɔ- (sometimes pronounced wɔ-) for both: cf. Bono ɔkɔ ("he/she/it has gone") vs. Akuapem ɔkɔ ("he/she has gone") and ɛkɔ ("it has gone").[6]

Grammar

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Pronouns

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Independent Subject Possessive Object
First sing. me me- me- m
Second sing. wo wo- wo w
Third sing. ɔno wɔ- ɔ-; ne no
First pl. yɛ-
Second pl. hõ-
Third pl. bɛ-
Unspecified ɛ-

References

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  1. ^ Abron at Ethnologue (26th ed., 2023) Closed access icon
  2. ^ "Kwame Arhin A Profile of Brong Kyempim". Scribd. p. 89. Retrieved 2024-11-16.
  3. ^ "The languages of the Akan peoples". d.lib.msu.edu. p. 12. Retrieved 2024-11-16.
  4. ^ "Akan". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2019-12-28.
  5. ^ a b Dolphyne, Florence (1982). "Language use among the Brong of Ghana". Journal of West African Languages. 12. Archived from the original on 2021-10-25. Retrieved 2019-12-29.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dolphyne, Florence (1979). Arhin, Kwame (ed.). "The Brong (Bono) dialect of Akan" (PDF). Brong Kyempim. Accra: Afram: 88–118.
  7. ^ "Archive of African Journals". digital.lib.msu.edu. Retrieved 2019-12-29.