Mada language
This article may require copy editing for grammar and spelling. (November 2025) |
| Mada | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Nigeria |
| Region | Nasarawa State, Kaduna State |
Native speakers | (100,000, not counting Nunku cited 1993)[1] |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | mda |
| Glottolog | mada1282 |
Mada is a regionally important language spoken in Nasarawa and southern Kaduna States of the Middle Belt, Nigeria, with many dialects. It is a highly tonal language. A translation of the New Testament into the language was finished in 1999.[2] The Nunku dialect has been identified to be a dialect of Mada rather than of Gbantu.
The Mada people are the second most populated tribe in Nasarawa state, mostly populating Akwanga and Kokona local governments. Possible archaeological history suggests that they may be descendants of the Nok civilization. They are closely related to the Ninzo people as well as to the Gbantu people. Their languages are believed to be descended from the Proto-Plateau language.
Phonology
[edit]Consonants
[edit]| Labial | Alveolar | Laminal | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | Labialized | Normal | Labialized | ||||||
| Nasal | m | n | ŋ | (ŋʷ) | |||||
| Plosive | voiceless | p | t | t͡s | k | kʷ | |||
| voiced | b | d | d͡z | g | gʷ | ||||
| prenasalised | ᵐb | ⁿd | ⁿd͡z | ᵑɡ | ᵑɡʷ | ||||
| Implosive | ɓ | ɗ | |||||||
| Fricative | voiceless | f | ɬ | s | h | hʷ | |||
| voiced | v | ɮ | z | ||||||
| Trill | r | ||||||||
| Approximant | l | j | w | ||||||
All consonants can be geminated, and geminated consonants hold equal status as non-geminated ones.[3]
- Geninated consonants originated from word inital CV to VC, vowel loss, and reduplication
/ŋ/ was historically a word final allophone of /n/, however that changed due to borrowing.[3]
Allophones
[edit]- Laminal consonants become post-alvealor consonants in palatalized words
- Implosives are unreleased word finally
- /t͡s, d͡z/ are grooved
- /h(ʷ)/ is in free variation with [x(ʷ)], though /h(ʷ)/ is more common
Occurance
[edit]Voiceless plosives are more common word initaly then finally, overall /p/ is 3 times less common than /t/ and 7 times less common then /k/
Generally /ɗ/ is 3 times more common than /ɗ/, however word finally it its 8 times more common
Prenasalized consonants are more common word medially than initially, inatilly /ᵐb, ᵑɡ/ are twice as common as /ⁿd/
Voiceless fricatives are 3 times more common as voiced ones word finally
/t͡s/ is very rare word finally
/n/ is overall the most common consonant, however world initally /m/ is 5 times as common
/l, r/are rare world initally
Vowels
[edit]Mada has 2 vowels, /a/ the vowel, and /Ø/ the lack of a vowel.[3]
Epenthetic vowels are inserted to break up consonant clusters, they are [ə], [ɪ], [ʊ], and [ʏ] depending on prosody, and 3 times shorter than a normal vowel[4]
/V, Ø/ have the following realizations:[3]
- [a, ə] when no prosody applies
- [o, u] when labialisation prosody applys (/V/ here is realized as [ɔ] in closed syllables)
- [e, i] when palatalization prosody applys (/V/ here is realized as [ɛ] in closed syllables)
- [ø~œ, y] when both labialization and prosody applys
Vowels can be rounded preceding labiovelars or /m, w/, turning /i, ɪ, e, ɛ/ into /y, ʏ, ø, œ/.[3]
Vowel raising also occurs in mada, where central vowels are raised to /ə/, back vowels to /u/, front unrounded vowels to /i/, and front rounded vowels to /y/. It occurs in the following circumstances[3]
- Before consonant clusters and liquids
- Between 2 indentical consonants
- In certain consonant clusters
- In the sequences CVwC and CVjC
- In word final CVj sequence
- In the penultimate syllable of a word (somtimes, post lexical)
Long vowels do occur but are rare and come from vowel contraction, partial reduplication, or contact with semi vowels[3]
Vowels are slightly lengthened word finally, not enough to be considered long though.
Prosody
[edit]Mada also has labialization and palatalization prosodys which can also combine
Palatalization and labialization also spread leftwords across morpheme boundarys
Palatalization indicates direction twoards the speaker, while labialization indicates direction away from the speaker, paltalization can also turn adjectives into diminutives
Frequency
[edit]Prosodys have the following frequences on nouns
- No prosody: 58%
- Palatalization: 26%
- Laialization: 14%
- Labiopalatalization: 2%
And the following frequences on verbs [5]
- No prosody: 58%
- Palatalization: 19%
- Labialization: 15%
- Exceptions: 5%
- Labiopalatalization: 3%
Palatalization also orthographicly spreads leftwords the following percentages[3]
- No spreading: 65%
- Spreading to the verb root: 28%
- Spreading to the subject prefix: 7%
Phonotactics and syllables
[edit]Syllabification is a surface structure phenomenon and therefor unstable[6]. Syllable boundarys can change according to the speech and metrical structure of phrases.
Syllables can also be word initaly palatalized and word finally labialized [3]
Mada words are built off of consonant skeletons, which are made into full words by addinf vowels, prosodies, and tones to them. Mada words must contain atleast one vowel, and the same applys to noun roots, but not to verb roots. Overall mada has the following phontactical rules:[3]
- No consonant clusters are allowed in the coda
- the final syllable of a word must have a full vowel
- Final syllables should (usually) be stressed
- /z(ⁿ)d, bm, dn, d͡zn, g(ʷ)ŋ/ are not allowed
- /wk, wg, wᵑɡ/ can only exist at morpheme or syllable boundary
- Voiced, prenasalized, and geminated consonants can not exist word finally
- Sounds closer to the syllable nucleus become more sonorius
- /b, d, g/ can only be followed by a liquid or semi vowel
- /ⁿd/ cant be followed by any consonant
- /ᵐb, ᵑɡ/ can only be folowed by liquids or lateral fricatives
- /d͡z/ never occurs world finally and can only be followed by /h, r/
- /t͡s/ can only be followed by /k, h/
- /ŋ/ doesnt occur word initally
Noun roots
[edit]Mada contains ths following noun roots[3]
| Number of consonants | Structure |
|---|---|
| 1 | CV |
| VCV | |
| 2 | CCV |
| CVC | |
| CVCV | |
| VCVC | |
| VCCV | |
| VCVCV | |
| 3 | CCVC |
| CVCVCV | |
| CVCCV | |
| CVCVC | |
| VCVCVC | |
| VCCVC | |
| VCVCVCV | |
| VCCVC |
Verb roots
[edit]Mada contains the following verb roots[3]
| Number of consonants | Structure |
|---|---|
| 1 | CV |
| 2 | CC |
| CVC | |
| CVCV | |
| CCV | |
| 3 | CCVC |
| CVCVC | |
| CVCVCV | |
| CCVCV |
Syllables
[edit]Roots with vowels attatched can be split into the following syllables[3]
| Structure | Distribution |
|---|---|
| V | Word initialy only |
| VC | |
| CV | Everywhere |
| CVC | |
| CCV | |
| CCVC | Words with only one syllable |
References
[edit]- ^ Mada at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- ^ Blench, Roger. "A brief history of Mada literacy, and the creation of a Mada dictionary".
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "The Phonology of Mada". SIL Global. 2018-10-15. Archived from the original on 2024-11-15. Retrieved 2025-11-19.
- ^ Pearce, 2014, Personal communication
- ^ Barrateau & Brunet (2000, p. 40)
- ^ Roberts, 2001, p. 16