(Redirected from Downstep)In
phonetics, 'downstep' is a
phonemic or
phonetic downward shift of
tone between the syllables or words of a tonal language. It is best known in the languages of West Africa, but the
pitch accent of
Japanese (a non-tonal language) is quite similar to downstep in Africa. Downstep contrasts with the much rarer
upstep. The symbol for downstep in the
International Phonetic Alphabet is a superscript down arrow,
↓, which is not yet supported by
Unicode. It is common to see a superscript exclamation mark,
!, used instead.
Phonetic downstep may occur between sequences of the same phonemic tone. For example, when two mid tones occur together in
Twi, the second is at a lower pitch than the first. Thus downshift plays a vital role in
downdrift and
tone terracing.
Phonemic downstep may occur when a low tone is
elided, or occurs as a
floating tone, and leaves a following tone at a lower level than it would otherwise be. An example occurs in
Bambara. In this language, the
definite article is a floating low tone. With a noun in isolation, it docks to the preceding vowel, turning a high tone into a falling tone:
However, when it occurs between two high tones, it downsteps the following tone:
| ''it's not a river'' |
| ''it's not the river'' |
Japanese pitch accent is similar. About 80% of Japanese words have an evenly rising pitch, something like French, which carries over onto following unstressed grammatical particles. However, a word may have a drop in pitch between
moras, or before the grammatical particle. An example is
| | ''oyster'' |
| | ''fence'' |
| | ''persimmon'' |
In isolation like this, the first word has a high-low pitch, whereas the second and third are homonyms with a low-high pitch. (The first syllable is only low when the word is said in isolation.) However, all three are distinct when followed by the so-called "subject" particle ''ga:''
| | ''oyster'' |
| | ''fence'' |
| | ''persimmon'' |
References