Buch, Englisch, 116 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 207 g
Dhaasanac, Burji, Rendille, Somali, and Afar
Buch, Englisch, 116 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 207 g
Reihe: SpringerBriefs in Linguistics
ISBN: 978-981-15-6971-5
Verlag: Springer Nature Singapore
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1 Phonology
Consonant Assimilation and Sonority in Dhaasanac 1.1 Introduction
1.2 CC Sequences within Morphemes 1.3 CC Sequences across Morpheme Boundaries 1.4 Consonant Assimilation and Deletion 1.5 Summary 2 Bimoraic Filter and Sonority in Dhaasanac Imperfective 2.1 Imperfective Paradigm 2.1.1 Simple -a Suffixation 2.1.2 Nasal Extension 2.1.3 Vowel Lengthening 2.1.4 Vowel Lengthening and Nasal Extension 2.1.5 Vowel Shortening and Nasal Extension 2.1.6 Reduplication 2.1.7 Vowel Shortening and Reduplication 2.1.8 Summary 2.2 Dominant Constraints in Dhaasanac 2.2.1 Partial Reduplication and Compensatory Gemination . 2.2.2 Progressive Vowel Harmony 2.2.3 Nasal Extension 2.2.4 Vowel Lengthening Due to Moraic Foot Binarity . . . . 2.3 Sonority Sensitive Syllable Contact Law 2.4 Conclusion II Morphology
3 Imperfect in Dhaasanac and OT Morphology 3.1 Prosodic Morpheme and Allomorphy 3.1.1 Prosodic Morpheme 3.1.2 Prosodic Morpheme of Dhaasanac Verbs and Allomorphs 3.2 Phonologically Unpredictable Allomorphy 3.2.1 Multiple Underlying Representations? 3.2.2 Unpredictable Allomorph Selection 3.3 Lexical Specification and Implication to Word-Based Morphol- ogy 3.3.1 Diacritic Features 3.3.2 Word Based Morphology 3.4 Constraints as Abstracted Morphemes: Word-Based OT . . 3.4.1 OT Morphology 3.4.2 Word Based OT Morphology 3.5 Conclusion III Syntax 4 NPI Licensing in Dhaasanac 4.1 NPI Maa 4.2 NPI Niini 4.3 Agree 4.4 Reverse Agree 4.5 Niini and Maa Licensing as Reverse Agree 5 Double Negation and NPI Licensing in Dhaasanac IV Semantics 6 Metalinguistic Negation in Dhaasanac 6.1 Focus Equivalent to Another Negation 6.2 Truth-Conditional Meaning of Focus 6.3 Pragmatic Account 6.3.1 Conversational Implicature 6.3.2 Metalinguistic Negation 6.3.3 Negation Outscopes the VERUM Operator 6.4 Peculiarities with Focused Negation in Dhaasanac 6.4.1 Polarity Reversing Focus in Non-assertions 6.4.2 Given Foci 6.5 Conclusion 7 Non-monotonic NPI Licensing in Dhaasanach 7.1 NPIs in Non-Downward Entailing Context 7.2 Other Non-monotonic NPI Licensing Context 7.2.1 At most n 7.2.2 Only 7.2.3 Superlative 7.2.4 Comparative 7.2.5 Exactly n 7.2.6 Emotives 7.2.7 Universal 7.2.8 Few 7.2.9 No 7.3 Conclusion 7.4 Appendix: Quantifiers in Dhaasanach 8 NPIs in Burji 979 Monstrous Operators in Dhaasanac 9.1 Monsters in Indirect Discourse 9.2 Monsters in Dhaasanac 9.3 Attitudes Shift Context Parameters 9.4 Conclusion 10 Temporal Indexicals in Dhaasanac 10.1 Three Types of Monsters 10.2 Indexical Shifting in Dhaasanac 10.2.1 Person Indexical I 10.2.2 Indexical Shifting in Relative Clauses 10.2.3 Person Indexical You 10.2.4 Reportatives 10.2.5 Temporal Indexicals Yesterday and Today 10.2.6 Locative Indexicals 10.2.7 Fake Past in Simple Sentences When Forgotten Surprise 10.3 Analysis 10.4 Oromo 10.5 Conclusion 11 Indexicals in Somali 12 De Re Indexicals in Afar 13 Indexicals in Rendille 13.1 Optional Shift of Indexicals 13.1.1 Optional Shift of Person Pronouns 13.1.2 Temporal and Locative Indexicals 13.1.3 Other predicates than tell or say 13.2 Analysis 14 All-shift Monster in Burji 14.1 Indexicals in Burji 14.2 Monster vs Binding Approach 14.3 Conclusion 14.4 Appendix A: Glossaries 14.5 Appendix B: Grammar




