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Atone contour orcontour tone is atone in a tonal language which shifts from one pitch to another over the course of the syllable or word. Tone contours are especially common inEast Asia,Southeast Asia,West Africa,Nilo-Saharan languages,Khoisan languages,Oto-Manguean languages and some languages ofSouth America.

When the pitch descends, the contour is called afalling tone; when it ascends, arising tone; when it descends and then returns, adipping orfalling-rising tone; and when it ascends and then returns, it is called apeaking orrising-falling tone. A tone in a contour-tone language which remains at approximately an even pitch is called alevel tone. Tones which are too short to exhibit much of a contour, typically because of a finalplosive consonant, may be calledchecked, abrupt, clipped, orstopped tones.
It has been theorized that the relative timing of a contour tone is not distinctive. That is, in some accents or languages a falling tone might fall at the end and in others it might fall at the beginning, but that such differences would not be distinctive. However, inDinka it is reported that the phonemic falling tone falls late (impressionistically high level + fall,[˥˦˩]) while the falling allophone of the low tone starts early (impressionistically fall + low level,[˥˨˩]).[1]
Lexical tones more complex than dipping (falling–rising) or peaking (rising–falling) are quite rare, perhaps nonexistent, though prosody may produce such effects. TheOld Xiang dialect ofQiyang is reported to have two "double contour" lexical tones, high and low fall–rise–fall, or perhaps high falling – low falling and low falling – high falling:˦˨˧˨ and˨˩˦˨ (4232 and 2142). The report did not determine if the final fall was lexical or merely the declination typically seen at the ends ofprosodic units, so these may actually be dipping tones.[2]