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<title>A MORPHOSYNTACTIC ANALYSIS OF THE Ẹ̀ DÓ PRONOUN</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1940" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1940</id>
<updated>2026-04-05T15:11:30Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-05T15:11:30Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>A MORPHOSYNTACTIC ANALYSIS OF THE Ẹ̀ DÓ PRONOUN</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1941" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>USENBO, Perpetual</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1941</id>
<updated>2024-04-24T14:24:38Z</updated>
<published>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">A MORPHOSYNTACTIC ANALYSIS OF THE Ẹ̀ DÓ PRONOUN
USENBO, Perpetual
Pronouns, words which refer anaphorically to noun phrases whose referents are named or&#13;
understood from context, are one of the universal linguistic categories that play a central&#13;
role in the grammar of languages, including Ẹ̀ dó, a Nigerian language. Extant studies on&#13;
the Ẹ̀ dó pronoun system have focused mainly on their identification and classification with&#13;
scant attention paid to their internal structure and interaction with other categories. This&#13;
study was, therefore, designed to examine the morphology of Ẹ̀ dó pronouns with a view to&#13;
determining their forms, syntactic distribution and the effects of interface interactions.&#13;
Morris Halle and Alec Marantz's Distributed Morphology was adopted as the framework.&#13;
The descriptive design was used. Three local government areas (Egor, Ovia North-East&#13;
and Oredo) were purposively selected because they are communities with large population&#13;
of native speakers. The Ibadan Syntactic Paradigm was used to conduct key informant&#13;
interviews with 21 native speakers aged between 30 and 80 years, seven from each&#13;
selected area. Interviews were complemented with textual corpus (bulletins and grammar&#13;
textbooks) and audio-visual materials (music, movies and documentaries). The data were&#13;
subjected to interlinear morphemic glossing and syntactic analysis.&#13;
There are three forms of pronouns in Ẹ̀ dó: independent,affixal and clitic pronouns. The&#13;
independent ones contain smaller morphemic units. Their internal structure shows the&#13;
language derives them through five processes: affixation, clipping, compounding,&#13;
conversion and reduplication. Affixal pronouns are the class maintaining reflexive prefix&#13;
tòbọ́ - and dè - the class-changing interrogative prefix. Clitics are personal pronouns which&#13;
attach to other words; they are inaccessible to modification. The syntactic distribution&#13;
shows that pronouns function as arguments: possessor, subject and object. The only&#13;
exceptions are interrogative pronouns. Unlike other pronouns, interrogatives are&#13;
nonarguments restricted to the periphery of a clause. This difference in distribution results&#13;
from their feature composition, and it reflects in syntactic projection. Interrogative&#13;
pronouns have the clause typing feature ([Qu]) and therefore project the interrogative&#13;
phrase within a split complementiser phrase. Other pronouns have the determiner phrase as&#13;
their maximal projection. Interface interaction effects confirm that morpho-phonology&#13;
underlies allomorphy in clitic and independent forms. These pronouns assimilate features&#13;
(nasality and tongue height) from adjacent words. The consequence is the proliferation of&#13;
personal pronouns. The morphosyntactic interface proves that constructions and temporal&#13;
distinction restrict the distribution of personal pronouns. For example, if tense and aspect in&#13;
a declarative sentence are past and perfective, one could use ọ̀ as third person singular&#13;
subject. Under negation, the choice remains the same. However, if the event is not yet&#13;
completed, one would use ẹ̀ as the subject pronoun. The syntax-semantics interface shows&#13;
adjacent words affect pronoun distribution; an example is Òghọ́ghọ́ rrìé íghó mẹ̀ and&#13;
Òghọ́ghọ́ rrìé íghó gùmwẹ̀ ; both sentences mean “Oghọghọ gives me money”. The effect is&#13;
that sentences with the same meanings have different first person pronouns, depending on&#13;
the proximity of the referent to the subject.&#13;
Ẹ̀ dó pronouns are better described using inferences from their internal structure, function,&#13;
and interface relations. These factors elucidate their derivation and differences in&#13;
distribution.
</summary>
<dc:date>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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