|
|
To illustrate how tone can affect meaning, let us look at the following example from Mandarin Chinese, which has five tones:
Tones can interact in complex ways through a process known as tone sandhi.
Tonal languages fall into two broad categories: register and contour systems. Mandarin Chinese and its close relatives have contour systems, where differences are made not based on absolute pitch, but on shifts in relative pitch in a word. Register systems are found in Bantu languages, which more typically seem to have 2 or 3 tones with specific relative pitches assigned to them, with a high tone and a low tone being the most common (plus a middle tone for languages that have a third pitch).
Please note that the word "pitch" is used loosely here, to refer to the comparative "difference" between a high pitch and a low pitch from one syllable to the next, rather than a contrast of absolute pitches such as one finds in music. As a result, when one combines tone with sentence contours, the musical pitch of a high tone at the beginning of a question may actually be lower than the musical pitch of a low-tone word at the end of the question, because the "average" pitch between the high and low tones rises (and falls) along with the overall pitch contour of the sentence.
A convenient notation attributed to the Chinese linguist Yuenren Chao where the pitch is split into five levels, 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. The lowest pitch is 1, and the highest pitch being 5. The variation in pitch can be described as a string of numbers, for instance for Mandarin
It has been suggested that speakers of tonal languages are more likely to have absolute pitch than speakers of non-tonal languages.
See also: Tone Name
simple:Tone language
Tone Contours
A mid-level tone would be indicated by /33/, a low level tone /11/, etc. These series of numbers are thus called "tone contours".Tonal languages and music