- Downstep (phonetics)
In
phonetics , downstep is a phonemic orphonetic downward shift of tone between the syllables or words of a tonal language. It is best known in the tonal languages of West Africa, but thepitch 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 theInternational Phonetic Alphabet is a superscript down arrow, ↓, which is not yet supported byUnicode . 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 andtone 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, thedefinite 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: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:"
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.