Farefare or Frafra, also known by the regional name of Gurenne (Gurene), is a Niger–Congo language spoken by the Frafra people of northern Ghana, particularly the Upper East Region, and southern Burkina Faso. It is a national language of Ghana, and is closely related to Dagbani and other languages of Northern Ghana, and also related to Mossi, also known as Mooré, the national language of Burkina Faso.
Frafra consists of three principal dialects, Gurenɛ (also written Gurunɛ,Gudenne, Gurenne, Gudeni, Zuadeni), Nankani (Naane, Nankanse, Ninkare), and Boone. Nabit and Talni have been mistakenly reported to be Frafra dialects.[2]
Names
The general and accepted name for the language is Farefare or Frafra. The varieties in Ghana are usually called "Gurene", and those in Burkina-Faso are called "Ninkare".[3]
Orthography
The Frafra language uses the letters of the Latin alphabet except for c, j, q, x, and with the addition of ɛ, ɩ, ŋ, ɔ, and ʋ. The tilde is used for showing nasalization in Burkina Faso, but in Ghana it is shown using the letter n.[4] The two nasal vowels /ɛ̃/ and /ɔ̃/ are spelt with ẽ and õ respectively.[3] All long nasal vowels only get their tilde written on the first letter.
The sound /ŋ/ appears in front of some words starting with /w/, leading them to change into the /j/ sound. /h/ only appears in loanwords, exclamations, and as an allophone of /f/. An example of both of these sound changes are weefo and yeho (both meaning "horse"). The only consonants Frafra words may end in are the two nasals /m/ and /n/.
Glottal stop
Glottal stops appear at the initial vowel of a word, but are not transcribed. Word-medially, vowel nasalization continues over the glottal stop. In rapid speech, the glottal stop is usually dropped, similar to how vowel hiatus gets dropped in Spanish.
Word medial glottal stops must be marked in writing.
Allophones
Allophones of /r/
[d] and [ɾ] are two phonetic realizations of the same phoneme. [d] occurs at the beginning of words, and [ɾ] is its counterpart everywhere else.
Allophones of /g/
[ɣ] is an allophone of /g/ that occurs after certain vowels. It is mostly written "g." Usage of the letter "ɣ" is quite rare.
Allophones of /j/
[ɲ] is an allophone of /j/ that occurs before a nasal vowel. It is always written as "y."
Sandhi
This section will describe all the morpho-phonological sandhi processes that affect Frafra.
Nasals
Nasal consonants undergo assimilation, coalescence, and elision.
Assimilation at Point of Articulation
Nasals assimilate to the point of articulation of the occlusive the proceed.
/m/ goes before /p/ and /b/
/n/ goes before /t/ and /d/
/ŋ/ goes before /k/
Coalescence
When a nasal is followed by /g/, the two consonants amalgamate.
/n/ + /g/ = /ŋ/
This rule does not apply to compound words (e.g. tẽŋgãnnɛ "sacred land") or loanwards (e.g. maŋgo "mango")
Elision
Nasals disappear when they go before /f/
/m/ + /f/ = /f/
/n/ + /f/ = /f/
Stops
Two voiced stops become their unvoiced form. Remember that [ɾ] is the word-medial allophone of /d/
/g/ + /g/ = /k/
/r/ + /r/ = /t/
Sonorants
Vibrant assimilation
Vibrant consonants, also called taps, assimilate to a preceding lateral or nasal.
/l/ + /r/ = /ll/
/n/ + /r/ = /nn/
/m/ + /r/ = either /nn/ or /mn/
Lateral assimilation
/n/ + /l/ = /nn/
/m/ + /l/ = /nn/
Combination of these processes
C designates any consonant, and N designates any nasal.
Like many Mande languages, Frafra features vowel harmony.[3] When suffixes are added to word roots, the vowel in the root selects whether the suffix will use the tense or lax form. The exception is suffixes ending in "-a" because /a/ is neutral in Frafra, meaning that it is only one form. Prefixes do not exist in Frafra.
Where all vowels must be in harmony
In disyllabic words, both vowels are always in harmony. The same applies in vowel sequences.
Mid vowels
The lax vowel -a in noun and verb endings will change the tense vowels /e/ and /o/ to lax vowels /ɛ/ and /ɔ/.
Close vowels
When a suffix's vowel is close, and stem's vowel is close and tense, it causes the suffix's vowel to become tense.
For example, the locativepostposition "-ʋm" becomes "-um" after the vowels /i/, /ĩ/, /u/, and /ũ/.
pʋʋrɛ ("belly") > pʋʋrʋm ("inside the belly")
nifo ("eye") > nifum ("inside the eye")
However, tense vowels that are not close do not affect "ʋm". Therefore poore ("back") becomes poorʋm("behind").
The particle "nɩ," which goes after a verbs to mark the incomplete aspect, becomes "ni" after /i/, /ĩ/, /u/, and /ũ/.
Grammar
Tone
Gurenɛ marks a high and a low tone. Changes in tone have an impact on either the lexical or grammatical function of a particular word.[7]
Lexical Function
With low tones the word becomes a verb, whereas with high tones it is a noun.
Only emphatic pronouns can appear in focus positions, whereas all other pronouns cannot appear in those positions. Emphatic pronouns are used in exclusive contexts, in which the speaker indicates that only one thing is true and not the other.
To form a reflexive pronoun in Gurenɛ the morphem -miŋa for singular or -misi for plural is attached to a particular personal pronoun. While in other Gur languages, the reflexive morphem is not sensitive to number, in Gurenɛ there exist two forms, one for each number.
There are two relative pronouns, ti and n. The former relativizes subjects, while the latter is used to relativize objects. Both pronouns are not sensitive to number or animacy, while this is the case in other Gur languages such as Dagbani for instance.
The verb phrase (VP) consists of pre- and postverbal particles surrounding the verb. Preverbal particles encode aspect, tense, negation, and mood, such as imperative and conditional. Postverbal particles also encode aspect and tense, but in addition to that they can also encode focus. The order of particles within the VP is strictly organized as shown below. Moreover, the maximal amount of pre- and postverbal particles is also strictly defined. There can be at maximum five preverbal and two postverbal particles within one clause in Gurenɛ.
people DEF yesterday then just surely in.order do certainly more AFF
„The people yesterday certainly did more than what was just expected.“[8]
Particles
There are a lot of particles in Gurenɛ, such that the total number is not fully clear.[9] The following table provides an overview of the most common particles.[8]
Aspect
Gurenɛ
now, after this
nyaa
in a determined way
wa
intention
ta
an action/event still lasts
naŋ
only
kɔ'ɔm
even
pugum
again
le
already
pìlum
just
kɔ'ɔm
rather
tugum
necessairly
yɛrum
instead
yi
ever
tabelɛ
as usual
ya'am
habitual
ná
Tense
past
daa
two days ago
daarɛ
three days ago
datata
years ago
yuum
the next day
dagi
Imperative
must
ta
need
wa
Conditional
if
san
Verb
The verb in Gurenɛ consists of an obligatory stem or root, that can take one or more morphemes.[8] Verbs appear either in the perfective or imperfective form, depending on its aspect. The perfective expresses actions in the present, whereas the imperfective denotes actions in the past or progressive.[10]
Root/Stem/Infinitive
Perfective -ri
Imperfective -ra
(single) closed event
open event
Gurenɛ
Gloss
follows Object/Adverb
follows Pronominal
nyu
drink
nyuuri
nyuura
da'
buy
da'ari
da'ara
lebe
return
leberi
lebera
dikɛ
take
dikɛri
dikɛra
pagesɛ
imitate
pagesɛri
pagesɛra
pa'alɛ
teach
pa'ali
pa'ala
di
eat
diti
dita
darɛ
disturb
dati
data
parɛ
be a lot
pati
pata
kiŋɛ
go
kini
kina
siŋɛ
walk
sini
sina
sigum
come down
sigeni
sigena
Question Formation
There are several ways of forming a question in Gurenɛ, but importantly the strict word order SVO is always to obey.
Ex situ
In subject questions the question word occurs as the first element of the clause and can either function as the subject or as the agent of the clause.
In general, questions are formed by raising intonation of the final tone. Questions without an explicit question word have a clause-final question marker -ì.
Question can also be formed by more than one question word. In these cases one question word occurs ex situ and the other(s) in situ. Again, a question word can only appear ex situ, if it replaces the subject or agent of the clause.
Question words in Gurenɛ can also cross clause boundaries, such that they originated in the embedded clause and have been fronted to the clause-initial position.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrsBodomo, Adams; Abubakari, Hasiyatu; Issah, Samuel Alhassan (2020). Handbook of the Mabia Languages of West Africa. Glienicke: Galda Verlag.
^ abcdefAtintono, Samuel (2011). Verb Morphology: Phrase structure in a Gur Language (Gurenɛ). Saarbrücken: Lambert Academic Publishing.