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abstract: |-
Should an alphabetic orthography for a tone language include tone marks? Opinion and
practice are divided along three lines: zero marking, phonemic marking and various reduced
marking schemes. This paper examines the success of phonemic tone marking for Dschang, a
Grassfields Bantu language which uses tone to distinguish lexical items and some grammatical
constructions. Participants with a variety of ages and educational backgrounds, and having
different levels of exposure to the orthography were tested on location in the Western
Province of Cameroon. All but one had attended classes on tone marking. Participants read
texts which were marked and unmarked for tone, then added tone marks to the unmarked
texts. Analysis shows that tone marking degrades reading fluency and does not help to resolve
tonally ambiguous words. Experienced writers attain an accuracy score of 83.5% in adding
tone marks to a text, while inexperienced writers score a mere 53%, which is not much better
than chance. The experiment raises serious doubts about the suitability of the phonemic
method of marking tone for languages having widespread tone sandhi effects, and lends
support to the notion that a writing system should have `fixed word images'. A critical review
of other experimental work on African tone orthography lays the groundwork for the
experiment, and contributes to the establishment of a uniform experimental paradigm.
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creators_name:
- family: Bird
given: Steven
honourific: ''
lineage: ''
date: 1999
date_type: published
datestamp: 2002-04-12
department: ~
dir: disk0/00/00/21/73
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eprint_status: archive
eprintid: 2173
fileinfo: /style/images/fileicons/application_pdf.png;/2173/3/lgsp42.pdf
full_text_status: public
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keywords: orthography design; reading experiments; African languages;
lastmod: 2011-03-11 08:54:55
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metadata_visibility: show
note: ~
number: ~
pagerange: 83-115
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publication: Language and Speech
publisher: Kingston Press
refereed: TRUE
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relation_type: []
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reportno: ~
rev_number: 12
series: ~
source: ~
status_changed: 2007-09-12 16:43:16
subjects:
- ling-phono
- psy-ling
succeeds: ~
suggestions: ~
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title: 'When marking tone reduces fluency: an orthography experiment in Cameroon'
type: journalp
userid: 1656
volume: 42