tonal language
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A tonal language is a language in which variations in pitch (tone) on a syllable or word are used to distinguish lexical meaning or grammatical function. In such languages, saying a word with a different pitch contour can change its meaning entirely.
Usage
The term is used to classify and describe languages based on their phonological characteristics. It is primarily an academic term in linguistics but is also common in general discussions about language learning and world languages.
Examples
- Mandarin Chinese is a well-known tonal language where the syllable "ma" can mean "mother," "hemp," "horse," or "scold" depending on its tone.
- Linguists study how a tonal language like Vietnamese uses pitch to differentiate words that otherwise sound identical.
- For speakers of non-tonal languages, learning a tonal language can be a significant challenge because they must train their ear to perceive pitch differences as meaningful.
Advanced Usage
- The concept is often contrasted with "intonation language," where pitch variations convey sentence-level meaning (like questions vs. statements) but do not change the core meaning of individual words.
- In linguistic typology, languages can be analyzed for their tonal language features, such as the number of contrastive tones or whether tones are assigned to syllables or lexical words.
Variants and Related Words
- Tone Language: A fully synonymous alternative term.
- Tonality (n): The quality or character of being tonal. (e.g., The of the language affects its musicality.)
- Tonal (adj): Relating to tone. (e.g., She is studying the system of Thai.)
- Non-tonal Language (n): A language that does not use pitch to distinguish word meaning.
Synonyms
- Tone language
Related Concepts (Not Synonyms)
- Pitch-accent language: A language where pitch is used, but in a more limited way than in a fully tonal language, often to distinguish stress or accent within a word (e.g., Japanese, Swedish). This is a related but distinct category.
- Intonation: The rise and fall of the voice in speaking, which conveys attitude, emotion, or grammatical structure (e.g., a question) but not lexical meaning.
Noun
- a language in which different tones distinguish different meanings