tone language
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A tone language is a language in which the pitch or tone used when pronouncing a syllable can change the meaning of a word. In such languages, words that are otherwise identical in their sequence of consonants and vowels can have completely different meanings depending on the specific tone (e.g., high, low, rising, falling) applied to them.
Usage
The term is used to classify and describe languages based on their phonological characteristics. It is a technical term in linguistics. - Mandarin Chinese is a well-known tone language. - Linguists study how tone languages organize their pitch systems.
Examples
- Academic Context: "The study compared the acquisition of phonology in a tone language versus a non-tone language."
- General Context: "If you want to learn Vietnamese, be prepared to master the tones, as it is a tone language."
Advanced Usage
- Phonological Analysis: In linguistic typology, a language is classified as a tone language if it uses pitch contrasts to distinguish lexical or grammatical meaning. This contrasts with "intonation languages," where pitch patterns convey sentence-level meaning (e.g., questions vs. statements) but not word-level meaning.
- Contrastive Tones: The defining feature is the existence of contrastive tones. For example, in Mandarin, the syllable "ma" can mean "mother" (high level tone), "hemp" (rising tone), "horse" (low dipping tone), or be a scolding particle (falling tone), depending on the tone.
Variants and Related Words
- Tonal Language: This is a common synonym and variant for tone language. The terms are often used interchangeably.
- Toneme (n): In phonology, a toneme is a contrastive or phonemic unit of pitch in a tone language.
- Intonation Language (n): A language where pitch variations are used primarily for sentence-level intonation (e.g., to mark a question) rather than to distinguish word meanings.
Synonyms
- Tonal language: A language where tone is phonemic.
Related Concepts (Not Phrasal Verbs or Idioms)
- Pitch-accent language: A type of language where only certain syllables in a word have a distinctive pitch pattern, which is a related but often distinct category from a prototypical tone language.
- Register tone: A tone that is level, like a high or low pitch.
- Contour tone: A tone that glides from one pitch to another, like a rising or falling tone.
Noun
- a language in which different tones distinguish different meanings