Wh-question formation in Lokạạ

Main Article Content

Mary Amaechi
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8438-3410

Abstract

This paper discusses wh-questions in the Benue-Congo language, Lokạạ. The different strategies of wh-question formation are examined. It is observed that in addition to the ex-situ and in-situ strategies, the language allows partial wh-movement under embedded clauses. It is shown, however, that embedded questions in the language are formed via relativization. I argue that these wh-questions strategies involve wh-movement. Wh-subject questions in Lokạạ are fascinating as the absence of an overt subject triggers the subject relative clause tone on the verb. I further show that wh-phrases and focused constituents in the language are not in complementary distribution and argue that wh phrases in the Lokạạ are not focused.

Article Details

Section
Research articles
Author Biography

Mary Amaechi, University of Ilorin

Mary Amaechi is a Lecturer in the Department of Linguistics and Nigerian Languages at the University of Ilorin, Nigeria. She received her Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of Potsdam, Germany in 2020. Mary Amaechi’s research focuses on syntax and its interfaces with morphology and phonology with emphasis on African languages. She has worked on topics involving wh-questions, cleft constructions, focus, serial verbs, comparative constructions, existentials, subject-object reversal. Her main research project at the moment focuses on the documentation and analysis of some aspects of the syntax of Lokaa, a Cross-River language of southern Nigeria.