In:Historical Linguistics 2022: Selected papers from the 25th International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Oxford, 1–5 August 2022
Edited by Holly Kennard, Emily Lindsay-Smith, Aditi Lahiri and Martin Maiden
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 369] 2025
► pp. 184–197
Morphosyntactic borrowing in closely related varieties
‘False cognates’ in Swahili
Published online: 7 April 2025
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.369.12mar
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.369.12mar
Abstract
The paper examines contact-induced morphosyntactic change in Swahili, where material which had
historically been lost is ‘reintroduced’ through contact with closely related languages which have retained the original
feature. The paper discusses three examples of these morphosyntactic ‘false cognates’: diminutive marking, habitual marking
and demonstrative forms, and shows that if it were not from the evidence from different diachronic stages and varieties of
Swahili, these forms could well be analysed as inherited from Proto-Bantu. The paper contributes to our understanding of the
historical development of Swahili, patterns of variation found in Swahili and Bantu languages more widely, as well as the
importance of comparative evidence for the unravelling of historical and contemporary relations between closely related
linguistic varieties.
Keywords: language contact, borrowing, cognates, Swahili
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Bantu languages
- 3.Cognacy, reconstruction, borrowing and convergence
- 4.Swahili
- 5.Morphosyntactic ‘reintroduction’
- 5.1The habitual -ag-
- 5.2The diminutive ka-
- 5.3The fourth demonstrative series -no
- 6.Conclusions
Acknowledgements Abbreviations References
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