Floating tone


A floating tone is a morpheme or element of a morpheme that contains neither consonants nor vowels, but only tone. It cannot be pronounced by itself but affects the tones of neighboring morphemes.
An example occurs in Bambara, a Mande language of Mali that has two phonemic tones, high and low. The definite article is a floating low tone, and with a noun in isolation, it is associated with the preceding vowel and turns a high tone into a falling tone: river; the river. When it occurs between two high tones, it downsteps the following tone:
Also common are floating tones associated with a segmental morpheme such as an affix. For example, in Okphela, an Edoid language of Nigeria, the main negative morpheme is distinguished from the present tense morpheme by tone; the present tense morpheme carries high tone, whereas the negative past morpheme imposes a high tone on the syllable which precedes it:
Floating tones derive historically from morphemes which assimilate or lenite to the point that only their tone remains.