Toro-tegu Dogon explained

Toro-tegu Dogon
Nativename:Tɔrɔ tegu
Region:Mali
Speakers:2,900
Date:1998
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Niger-Congo
Fam2:Dogon
Fam3:Plains
Iso3:dtt
Glotto:toro1253
Glottorefname:Toro Tegu Dogon

The Toro language, Tɔrɔ tegu 'Mountain speech', is a Dogon language spoken in Mali. It is closest to the prestige variety of Dogon, Jamsay tegu, though speakers deny they are related and understand little of it. (They understand nothing of the Dogon languages on the escarpment or plateau.) Hochstetler report difficulties in comprehension between Tɔrɔ tegu and one of the western Plains Dogon languages, Tomo kan.

Phonology

Consonants

! Labial! Alveolar! Alveopalatal! Velar
Nasalpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Plosivepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Fricativepronounced as /link/
Lateralpronounced as /link/
Sonorantpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /w̃/pronounced as /r̃/pronounced as /j̃/

Vowels

Vowel Phonemes!Short Oral!Long Oral!Long Nasal
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /uː/pronounced as /ũː/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /oː/pronounced as /õː/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /ɔː/pronounced as /ɔ̃ː/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /aː/pronounced as /ãː/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /ɛː/pronounced as /ɛ̃ː/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /eː/pronounced as /ẽː/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /iː/pronounced as /ĩː/

Tone

There are two tones, high and low. Each stem contains a tone melody, and each tone melody must contain at least one high tone- that is, a word cannot be exclusively low tone. The tone melody of a word may be overridden by inflectional morphology or syntax. In some cases a word may HLH or LHL melody, as in the case of gɔːn˧˦˨ (griot with war tomtoms) or kaː˦˨nu˦ (monkey).

Grammar

Number

When referring to humans, number is indicated by suffixing of the noun. In words for humans with a basic CV- stem, the singular suffix is -r̃ú. In words for humans with longer stems, the singular suffix is -nú or apocopated -ń. For plural words for humans, the suffix is -mú or -ḿ, regardless of stem length.

Sources