Vowels Chewa has five short vowel sounds: a, ɛ, i, ɔ, u; these are written
a,
e,
i,
o,
u. Long vowels are sometimes found, e.g.
áákúlu 'big' (class 2),
kufúula 'to shout'. When a word comes at the end of a phrase, its penultimate vowel tends to be lengthened, except for non-Chewa names and words, such as or , in which the penultimate vowel always remains short. The added 'u' or 'i' in borrowed words such as 'laptop' or 'internet' tends to be very short. Vowels are generally lengthened in the penultimate syllable of a prosodic phrase.
Consonants Chewa consonants can be simple (directly preceding a vowel) or may be followed by
w or
y: •
b,
kh,
g,
f,
m,
s etc. •
bw,
khw,
gw,
fw,
mw,
sw etc. •
bz,
tch,
j,
fy,
ny,
sh etc. In the orthography, the place of
by is taken by the affricate
bz, the place of
gy is taken by
j, and that of
sy by
sh. Voiced and aspirated consonants, as well as [f] and [s], can also be preceded by a
homorganic nasal: •
mb,
ngw,
nj,
mv,
nz etc. •
mph, , ,
mf,
ns etc. It is debated whether these are
consonant clusters , or whether Chichewa has
prenasalized,
palatalized and
labialized consonants . The most straightforward analysis is that they are clusters. The consonant inventory under a cluster analysis is as follows: Consonants in parentheses are marginal or found mainly in loanwords. The lateral is an approximant word-initially and a flap medially. If the more complex syllable onsets are analyzed as single consonants, the inventory is as follows: The spelling used here is that introduced in 1973, which is the one generally in use in the Malawi at the present time, replacing the
Chinyanja Orthography Rules of 1931.
Notes on the consonants • In most words, Chewa
b and
d (when not
prenasalised) are pronounced
implosively, by sucking slightly. However, there is also a plosive
b and
d, mostly found in foreign words, such as 'bar', 'expensive' (from Afrikaans ) (in contrast to the implosive
b and
d in native words such as 'wound' and 'which cuts'). A plosive
d is also found in 'to stamp (a document)' and 'confident step'. • The affricate sounds
bv and
pf were formerly commonly heard but are now generally replaced by
v and
f, e.g. 'problem', 'bone'. In the dictionary produced by the University of Malawi, the spellings
bv and
pf are not used in any of the headwords, but
bv is used two or three times in the definitions. • The combination
bz is described by Atkins as an "alveolar-labialised fricative". The combination sounds approximately as or . Similarly
ps is pronounced approximately as or . • The sounds written
ch,
k,
p and
t are pronounced less forcibly than the English equivalents and generally without aspiration. Stevick notes that in relaxed speech, the first three are sometimes replaced with the voiced fricatives , and , and
t can be heard as a voiced flap. In the combination
-ti (e.g. 'how many'),
t may be lightly aspirated. •
h is also used in Chewa but mostly only in loanwords such as 'hotel', 'horse', 'monthly allowance given to chiefs'. •
j is described by Scotton and Orr as being pronounced "somewhat more forward in the mouth" than in English and as sounding "somewhere between an English
d and
j". •
l and
r are the same phoneme, representing a retroflex tap , approximately between and . According to the official spelling rules, the sound is written as 'r' after 'i' or 'e', otherwise 'l'. It is also written with 'l' after a prefix containing 'i', as in 'tongue'. •
m is syllabic in words where it is derived from
mu, e.g. 'relative' (3 syllables), 'teacher' (4 syllables), 'he gave him' (5 syllables). However, in class 9 words, such as 'gift', 'plate', or 'witch', and also in the class 1 word 'cat', the
m is pronounced very short and does not form a separate syllable. In Southern Region dialects of Malawi, the syllabic
m in words like 'lion' is pronounced in a
homorganic manner, i.e. (with three syllables), but in the Central Region, it is pronounced as it is written, i.e. . •
n, in combinations such as
nj, ,
nkh etc., is assimilated to the following consonant, that is, it is pronounced or as appropriate. In words of class 9, such as 'snake' or 'minister' it is pronounced very short, as part of the following syllable. However, [n] can also be syllabic, when it is contracted from
ndi 'it is' or
ndí 'and', e.g. 'and to go'; also in the remote past continuous tense, e.g. 'he used to go'. In some borrowed words such as or the combinations
nk and
nt with non-syllabic
n can be found but not in native words. •
ng is pronounced as in 'finger' and
ng' is pronounced as in 'singer'. Both of these consonants can occur at the beginning of a word: '
kudu', 'cow or
ox'. •
w in the combinations
awu,
ewu,
iwu,
owa,
uwa (e.g. 'voice', 'road', 'sound', 'enter', 'flower') although often written is generally not pronounced. Combinations such as
gwo or
mwo are not found; thus (short for ) 'he is good' but (short for ) 'he is bad'; 'stone' but 'fire'. •
ŵ, a "closely lip-rounded with the tongue in the close-i position", was formerly used in Central Region dialects but is now rarely heard, usually being replaced by 'w'. ("It is doubtful whether the majority of speakers have in their phoneme inventory" (Kishindo).) The symbol 'ŵ' is generally omitted in current publications such as newspapers. In the dialects that use the sound, it is found only before a, i, and e, while before o and u it becomes . To some linguists (e.g. Watkins) it sounds similar to the Spanish .
Tones Like most other Bantu languages, Chewa is a
tonal language; that is to say, the pitch of the syllables (high or low) plays an important role in it. Tone is used in various ways in the language. First of all, each word has its own tonal pattern, for example: • 'person' (Low, Low) • 'dog' (Rising, Mid) • 'goat' (Falling, Low) • 'maize' (High, Low, Low) Usually there is only one high tone in a word (generally on one of the last three syllables), or none. However, in compound words there can be more than one high tone, for example: • 'food' (High, High, High; derived from + , 'a thing of eating') A second important use of tone is in the verb. Each tense of the verb has its own characteristic tonal pattern (negative tenses usually have a different pattern from positive ones). For example, the present habitual has high tones on the initial syllable and the penultimate, the other syllables being low: • 'I (usually) help' The recent past continuous and present continuous, on the other hand, have a tone on the third syllable: • 'I was helping' • 'I am helping' Tones can also indicate whether a verb is being used in a
main clause or in a
dependent clause such as a relative clause: • 'the week has ended' • 'the week which has ended (i.e. last week)' A third use of tones in Chewa is to show phrasing and sentence
intonation. For example, immediately before a pause in the middle of a sentence the speaker's voice tends to rise up; this rise is referred to as a
boundary tone. Other intonational tones are sometimes heard, for example a rising or falling tone at the end of a yes-no question. ==Grammar==