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On the Syntax and Semantics of Modals in Likpakpaanl

Dr. ACHEAMPONG, SAMUEL OWOAHENE
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  soacheampong@uew.edu.gh
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Authors
Acheampong, S. O.
Paper Title
On the Syntax and Semantics of Modals in Likpakpaanl
Conference Title
17th Linguistics Association of Ghana Conference
Conference Date
2025, September, 22-23
Conference City
Hohoe
Conference State/Region
Volta Region
Conference Country
Ghana
Abstract

This paper investigates the syntax and semantics of modal verbs in Likpakpaanl, a Mabia (Gur) language spoken in the Northern region of Ghana. Drawing on naturally occurring data,  the paper examines five modal verbs: ŋmàà ‘can’ (1), bàn ‘want’ (2),  yè kè must‘ (3), ‘should’ (4), and the modal adverb nìbààkàn ‘maybe’ (5).

  1. Nakoja nàn     ŋmàà              kìn       lìnùùl  gbààn.

           N.        pst      can.able          fry       yam     def

            ‘Nakoja was able to fry the yam.’

  1. Mbaye nàn     bàn     kè        ù          kùùr    kìsààk gbààn.

           M.       pst      want comp      rp        weed   farm    def

  1.      Mpopiin yè     ké        ù          jì         sàkɔlà.

              M.          cop  comp   rp        eat       fufu

           ‘Mpopiin must eat fufu.’

  1.   Talido               dàà      lòòr.

             T.        should    buy      car

          ‘Talido should buy a car.’

  1. Nìbààkàn,      Irene gà        lùù       n-nyùn            gbààn.

          Maybe,           I.          fut      fetch    water               def

        ‘Maybe Irene willl fetch the water.’

The findings reveal that modals such as ŋmàà and bàn select different complement types (vP vs. CP), while adverbial modals like nìbààkàn exhibit positional flexibility within the clause, aligning with cross-linguistic patterns of modal adverbs (Cinque, 1999; Gbegble & Nuyts, 2012). The selectional differences between bàn and ŋmàà are similar to those found in Ewe (Ameka, 2008) and Igbo (Uchechukwu, 2008). I propose that Likpakpaanl modals project a Modal Phrase (ModP) in the clausal spine, following the proposal of  Cinque (1999) and  Rizzi (1997). This study contributes to the typology of modality by showing how syntactic position, clausal size, and semantic interpretation interact in Likpakpaanl. The paper contributes to ongoing discussions in typological semantics, the syntax of modality, and the interaction between modality, tense, and aspect in African languages..

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