A grammar of Supyire:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Berlin u.a.
Mouton de Gruyter
1994
|
Schriftenreihe: | Mouton grammar library
14 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverz. S. 738 - 744 |
Beschreibung: | XIX, 766 S. Kt. |
ISBN: | 3110140578 |
Internformat
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040 | |a DE-604 |b ger |e rakddb | ||
041 | 0 | |a eng | |
044 | |a gw |c DE | ||
049 | |a DE-12 |a DE-355 |a DE-11 |a DE-188 | ||
050 | 0 | |a PL8694.S96 | |
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084 | |a EP 18805 |0 (DE-625)26765:230 |2 rvk | ||
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100 | 1 | |a Carlson, Robert |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)107264780X |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a A grammar of Supyire |c Robert Carlson |
264 | 1 | |a Berlin u.a. |b Mouton de Gruyter |c 1994 | |
300 | |a XIX, 766 S. |b Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 1 | |a Mouton grammar library |v 14 | |
500 | |a Literaturverz. S. 738 - 744 | ||
650 | 7 | |a Suppire |2 gtt | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammatik | |
650 | 4 | |a Suppire language |x Grammar | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Suppire-Sprache |0 (DE-588)4354405-8 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Grammatik |0 (DE-588)4021806-5 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
689 | 0 | 0 | |a Suppire-Sprache |0 (DE-588)4354405-8 |D s |
689 | 0 | 1 | |a Grammatik |0 (DE-588)4021806-5 |D s |
689 | 0 | |5 DE-604 | |
830 | 0 | |a Mouton grammar library |v 14 |w (DE-604)BV000018422 |9 14 | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Regensburg |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=006429777&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-006429777 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804124068355506176 |
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adam_text | Contents
Tables
........................................................................................................xvii
Abbreviations
............................................................................................xviii
Map
1:
Area where Supyire is spoken
.........................................................xx
Map
2:
Area where Senufo languages are spoken
.......................................xxi
1.
Introduction
...............................................................................................1
1.1.
The people
..............................................................................................1
1.2.
The language
...........................................................................................1
1.3.
Previous research
....................................................................................2
1.4.
The data base
..........................................................................................3
1.5.
Aims of this grammar
.............................................................................3
1.6.
Typological characteristics
......................................................................5
1.7.
A word on the examples
..........................................................................5
2.
Phonology
..................................................................................................7
2.1.
Consonants
..............................................................................................8
2.1.1.
Stops
.................................................................................................9
2.1.1.1.
Flapping
....................................................................................10
2.1.1.2.
Voicing
......................................................................................10
2.1.1.3.
Glottalization
.............................................................................12
2.1.1.4.
Lenition
and absorption of voiced stops
....................................13
2.1.1.5.
Elision of stops
..........................................................................14
2.1.2.
Fricatives
........................................................................................15
2.1.2.1.
Nasal plus fricative clusters
.......................................................15
2.1.2.2.
Rhotacization
.............................................................................16
2.1.3.
Approximants
..................................................................................17
2.1.3.1.
Occlusion of approximants
........................................................17
2.1.3.2.
Elision of IV and /w/
..................................................................17
2.1.4.
Nasals
..............................................................................................19
2.1.4.1.
Nasal plus consonant clusters
....................................................19
2.1.4.2.
Elision of /n/
..............................................................................20
2.1.5.
Secondary release
...........................................................................20
2.2.
Vowels
..................................................................................................28
2.2.1.
Processes affecting stressed vowels
................................................29
2.2.1.1
Vowel lowering and diphthongization
........................................29
2.2.1.2.
Vowel coalescence
....................................................................32
2.2.1.3.
Neutralization
............................................................................32
2.2.1.4.
Vowellengthening
.....................................................................33
2.2.1.5.
Denasalization
.........................................-.................................33
2.2.2.
Processes affecting unstressed vowels
............................................34
2.2.2.1.
Vowel harmony
.........................................................................34
viii Contents
2.2.2.2.
Vowel reduction
........................................................................37
2.2.2.3.
Vowel elision
............................................................................37
2.2.2.4.
Final vowel assimilation
............................................................38
2.2.2.5.
Approximant formation
.............................................................39
2.2.2.6.
Variation of
/i/ and/e/
in clitics
.................................................40
2.2.2.7.
Rounding before labials
.............................................................41
2.2.2.8.
Spread of nasalization
...............................................................41
2.3.
Tone
......................................................................................................42
2.3.1.
Basic tunes
......................................................................................43
2.3.1.1.
Toneless affixes
.........................................................................43
2.3.1.2.
Basic verb tunes
........................................................................43
2.3.1.3.
Basic noun tunes
........................................................................45
2.3.1.4.
Tunes of other word classes
......................................................53
2.3.2.
Leftward docking of floating tones
.................................................54
2.3.3.
Rightward spreading and docking
...................................................55
2.3.3.1.
Low spread
................................................................................55
2.3.3.2.
Spread of
L
from LMw
.............................................................63
2.3.3.3.
High spread
...............................................................................65
2.3.4.
Tone changing rules
........................................................................66
2.3.4.1.
Mw becomes
H
after
M
.............................................................67
2.3.4.2.
L
becomes
M
after
M
................................................................69
2.3.4.3.
Mw becomes
H
after a H noun
..................................................70
2.3.5.
Downstep,
downdrift,
and intonation
...............................................71
2.3.5.1.
Downstep
.....................................................:.............................71
2.3.5.2.
Downdrift
..................................................................................72
2.3.5.3.
Intonation
..................................................................................72
3.
Nouns
.......................................................................................................75
3.1.
Noun genders
........................................................................................75
3.1.1.
The gender suffixes
.........................................................................76
3.1.1.1.
Basic gender suffixes
.................................................................76
3.1.1.2.
Definite suffixes
........................................................................77
3.1.1.3.
Gender
1
singular
......................................................................78
3.1.1.4.
Gender
1
definite singular
.........................................................79
3.1.1.5.
Gender
1
plural
..........................................................................79
3.1.1.6.
Gender
1
definite plural
.............................................................81
3.1.1.7.
Gender
2
singular
......................................................................83
3.1.1.8.
Gender
2
definite singular
.........................................................84
3.1.1.9.
Gender
2
plural
..........................................................................84
3.1.1.10.
Gender
2
definite plural
...........................................................85
3.1.1.11.
Gender
3
singular
....................................................................86
3.1.1.12.
Gender
3
definite singular
.......................................................87
3.1.1.13.
Gender
3
plural
........................................................................89
3.1.1.14.
Gender
3
definite plural
...........................................................90
Contents
ix
3.1.1.15.
Gender
4..................................................................................92
3.1.1.16.
Gender
4
definite
.....................................................................93
3.1.1.17.
Gender
5..................................................................................94
3.1.1.18.
Gender
5
definite
.....................................................................94
3.1.2.
Semantic values of the genders
.......................................................95
3.1.2.1.
Gender
1:
human
.......................................................................96
3.1.2.2.
Gender
2:
augmentative
.............................................................99
3.1.2.3.
Gender
3:
diminutive
...............................................................102
3.1.2.4.
Gender
4:
collectives
...............................................................103
3.1.3.5.
Gender
5:
pourables
................................................................104
3.2.
Derivational noun morphology
............................................................105
3.2.1.
The diminutive suffix
....................................................................105
3.2.2.
Nominalizing affixes
.....................................................................107
3.2.2.1.
Bare nominalizations
...............................................................108
3.2.2.2.
N- nominalization
....................................................................109
3.2.2.3.
Locative nominalization
..........................................................110
3.2.2.4.
Object nominalization
..............................................................112
3.2.2.5.
Action nominalization
.............................................................112
3.2.2.6.
Time nominalization
................................................................113
3.2.2.7.
Manner nominalization
............................................................113
3.2.2.8.
Privative nominalization
..........................................................114
3.2.2.9.
Agentive
nominalization
..........................................................115
3.2.3.
Noun compounds
...........................................................................116
3.2.3.1.
Noun-noun compounds
............................................................116
3.2.3.2.
Noun-verb compounds
.............................................................119
3.2.3.3.
Serial verb compounds
.......................,....................................124
3.2.3.4.
Phrasal compounds
..................................................................125
4.
Verbs
.....................................................................................................127
4.1.
Verb prefixes
......................................................................................127
4.1.1.
The intransitive prefix
...................................................................127
4.1.2.
The future prefix
...........................................................................128
4.2.
Imperfective morphology
....................................................................130
4.2.1.
-//and its variants
..........................................................................130
4.2.2.
Vowel raising
................................................................................136
4.2.3.
-ge and its variants
........................................................................137
4.2.4.
Tone
..............................................................................................138
4.2.5.
Consonant mutation
.......................................................................140
4.2.6.
Verbs with no separate imperfective form
.....................................141
4.2.7.
The origin of the imperfective suffixes
.........................................141
4.3.
The causative
......................................................................................142
4.4.
The iterative
/
intensive
.......................................................................145
4.5.
Incorporated objects
.....................................................·......................146
χ
Contents
5.
Other word classes
.................................................................................151
5.1.
Pronouns and determiners
...................................................................151
5.1.1.
First and second person pronouns
.................................................151
5.1.1.1.
Declarative first and second person pronouns
.........................151
5.1.1.2.
Non-declarative pronouns
........................................................153
5.1.1.3.
First and second person reflexive pronouns
.............................154
5.1.2.
Third person pronouns and determiners
........................................155
5.1.2.1.
Anaphoric pronouns
................................................................156
5.1.2.2.
Emphatic pronouns
..................................................................157
5.1.2.3.
Reflexive pronouns
..................................................................157
5.1.2.4.
Indefinite pronouns
..................................................................158
5.1.2.5.
Indefinite other pronouns
......................................................159
5.1.2.6.
Identifier pronouns
..................................................................159
5.1.2.7.
Demonstrative pronouns
..........................................................160
5.1.2.8.
Relative pronouns
....................................................................161
5.1.2.9.
Simple interrogative pronouns
.................................................161
5.1.2.10.
Emphatic interrogative pronouns
...........................................162
5.1.2.11.
Definite other determiners
..................................................162
5.1.2.12.
The independent possessive pronouns
...................................163
5.2.
Adjectives
...........................................................................................164
5.3.
Numerals
.............................................................................................167
5.3.1.
Cardinal numbers
..........................................................................167
5.3.2.
Ordinal numbers
............................................................................169
5.4.
Quantifiers
..........................................................................................171
5.5.
Adverbs
...............................................................................................172
5.5.1.
Adverbs of quantity and manner
...................................................173
5.5.1.1.
Ordinary adverbs of quantity and manner
................................173
5.5.1.2.
Ideophones
..............................................................................174
5.5.2.
Locative adverbs
...........................................................................175
5.5.3.
Adverbs of time
.............................................................................175
5.6.
Tense, aspect, and modality auxiliaries
...............................................177
5.7.
Adpositions
.........................................................................................178
5.7.1.
Simple adpositions
........................................................................178
5.7.2.
Complex postpositions
...................................................................181
5.8.
Conjunctions
.......................................................................................182
5.8.1.
Noun phrase conjunctions
.............................................................183
5.8.2.
Clausal conjunctions
.....................................................................184
5.9.
Question words
...................................................................................186
5.10.
Clause final markers
.........................................................................186
5.11.
Interjections
......................................................................................186
6.
Noun phrases
.........................................................................................189
6.1.
Determiners
.........................................................................................189
6.1.1.
Pre-head determiners
.....................................................................189
Contents xi
6.1.2.
Post-head determiners
...................................................................194
6.1.2.1.
Indefinite/partitive and indefinite other
................................195
6.1.2.2.
Interrogative determiners
.........................................................198
6.1.2.3.
Definite other determiners
....................................................198
6.2.
Genitive constructions
.........................................................................200
6.2.1.
Simple genitives
............................................................................200
6.2.2.
Genitives with pronominal heads
..................................................205
6.3.
Numerals and quantifiers
....................................................................206
6.3.1.
Cardinal numbers
..........................................................................206
6.3.2.
Ordinal numbers
............................................................................212
6.3.3.
Quantifiers
....................................................................................213
6.3.3.1.
Universal quantifiers
...............................................................214
6.3.3.2.
Exclusive quantifiers
...............................................................216
6.3.3.3.
Inclusive quantifiers
................................................................218
6.3.3.4.
Emphatic modifiers
.................................................................220
6.4.
Adjectives
...........................................................................................222
6.5.
Descriptive genitive phrases
...............................................................228
6.6.
Reduplicated verb modifying phrases
.................................................230
6.7.
Coordination of noun phrases
..............................................................232
6.7.1.
Conjunction
...................................................................................232
6.7.2.
Disjunction
....................................................................................233
6.7.3.
Agreement with coordinate noun phrases
......................................233
7.
Simple clauses
.......................................................................................237
7.1.
Basic word order in simple clauses
.....................................................237
7.2.
Identificational clauses
........................................................................239
7.3.
Copular
clauses
...................................................................................241
7.3.1.
The copulas
...................................................................................241
7.3.2.
Locative and related functions
......................................................245
7.3.2.1.
Locative
copular
clauses
.........................................................245
7.3.2.2.
Existential
copular
clauses
.......................................................246
7.3.2.3.
Possessive
copular
clauses
......................................................248
7.4.
Verbal clauses
.....................................................................................249
7.4.1.
Problems of verb classification
.....................................................249
7.4.2. Stative
verbs
..................................................................................251
7.4.3.
Active intransitive verbs
...............................................................255
7.4.3.1.
Simple active intransitive verbs
...............................................256
7.4.3.2.
Intransitive verbs with locative objects
...................................259
7.4.3.3.
Intransitive verbs with predicate
nominais
..............................260
7.4.4.
Transitive verbs
.............................................................................262
7.4.4.1.
Prototypical transitive verbs
....................................................262
7.4.4.2.
Transitive verbs with experiencer subjects
..............................264
7.4.4.3.
Verbs with recipient direct objects
..........................................264
7.4.4.4.
Transitive verbs with predicate
nominais
................................265
xii
Contents
7.4.4.5.
Transitive verbs with locative indirect objects
........................267
7.4.4.6.
Transitive verbs with dative indirect objects
...........................269
7.4.4.7.
Transitive verbs with two indirect objects
...............................271
7.4.4.8.
Verbs with sentential complements
.........................................272
7.5.
Peripheral case roles
...........................................................................274
7.5.1.
Benefactive
...................................................................................274
7.5.2.
Associative and instrumental
.........................................................275
7.5.3.
Manner
..........................................................................................275
7.5.4.
Standard of comparison
.................................................................276
7.5.5.
External locatives
..........................................................................276
7.5.6.
Time
..............................................................................................277
7.6.
Adverbs in simple clauses
...................................................................278
8.
Serial verb constructions
........................................................................283
8.1.
Serials versus
consécutives
.................................................................283
8.2.
Types of serial construction
................................................................289
8.2.1.
The come and go serial construction
..........................................289
8.2.2.
The future serial construction
........................................................290
8.2.3.
The subjunctive serial construction
...............................................291
8.2.4.
The
realis
serial construction
........................................................292
8.3.
Grammaticalized verbs
........................................................................294
8.3.1.
Deictic motion verbs
.....................................................................294
8.3.2.
Temporal and aspectual verbs
.......................................................295
8.3.3.
Modality verbs
..............................................................................296
8.3.4.
Case marking verbs
.......................................................................296
8.3.4.1.
Instrument:
taha
use
..............................................................296
8.3.4.2.
Benefactive: jfcu/ give
...........................................................297
8.3.4.3.
Standard of comparison: tow pass
........................................297
8.3.5.
Serial verbs functioning as manner adverbs
..................................298
8.3.5.1.
núrú
return, again
.................................................................298
8.3.5.2.
láhá
let go, again
...................................................................299
8.3.5.3.
wyere be hot, quickly
............................................................299
8.3.5.4.
fyàà
hurry
.............................................................................299
8.3.5.5.
ď/ be
straight, immediately
...................................................300
8.3.5.6.
pàà
surprise, suddenly
...........................................................301
8.3.5.7.
/yànuà
and
fyènrk
be first
.....................................................301
8.3.5.8.
sòd
be early in the morning
..................................................302
8.3.5.9.
уаа
fashion, do well
..............................................................302
8.3.5.10.
peele lie in wait for, stealthily
............................................303
8.3.5.11.
gwoho hide, secretly
............................................................303
8.3.5.12.
тШ
do all over
.................................................................304
8.3.5.13.
jwo say
................................................................................304
Contents
xiii
8.3.5.14.
pa come and
sa
go
............................................................305
8.3.5.15.
kwo finish, finally
...............................................................306
8.3.5.16.
kanha be tired, finally
.........................................................306
9.
Aspect, tense, modality, and negation
....................................................307
9.1.
Aspect
.................................................................................................309
9.1.1.
Perfective versus imperfective
......................................................309
9.1.2.
Progressive
....................................................................................311
9.1.3.
Habitual
.........................................................................................316
9.1.4.
Other means of coding durativity
..................................................320
9.1.5.
Inceptive
.......................................................................................322
9.1.6.
Terminative
...................................................................................324
9.1.7.
Repetitive and distributive
.............................................................327
9.2.
Tense
..................................................................................................328
9.2.1.
Present
..........................................................................................328
9.2.2.
Past
...............................................................................................329
9.2.3.
Future
............................................................................................334
9.2.4.
Perfect
...........................................................................................337
9.2.5.
Still , again , no longer , and not yet
......................................345
9.2.6.
Coding sequence: the narrative/sequential
.....................................348
9.2.7.
Combinations of tense-aspects
......................................................353
9.2.7.1.
Combinations with past
...........................................................353
9.2.7.2.
Combinations with progressive
................................................358
9.3.
Modality
..............................................................................................363
9.3.1.
Realis
versus
irreális
.....................................................................363
9.3.2.
Epistemic
modality
........................................................................364
9.3.2.1.
Increased certainty
..................................................................364
9.3.2.2.
Reduced certainty
....................................................................367
9.3.2.3.
Counterfact
..............................................................................369
9.3.3.
Obligation
.....................................................................................369
9.3.4.
Ability
...........................................................................................371
9.3.5.
Purpose
.........................................................................................374
9.3.6.
Modality in subordinate clauses
....................................................375
9.4.
Negation
..............................................................................................376
9.4.1.
The marking of negation
...............................................................376
9.4.1.1.
Clause final negative marking
.................................................376
9.4.1.2.
Negative marking in auxiliary position
....................................379
9.4.1.3.
Negative polarity items
............................................................385
9.4.2.
The scope of negation
...................................................................387
9.4.3.
Negation in complex sentences
.....................................................389
9.4.4.
Word and phrase negation
.............................................................396
xiv
Contents
10.
Transitivity and voice
..........................................................................399
10.1.
Transitivity in Supyire
......................................................................399
10.2.
Detransitivization
..............................................................................401
10.2.1.
Passive
........................................................................................401
10.2.2.
Verbs which allow patient suppression
........................................407
10.2.3.
Coding less affected patients as indirect objects
.........................409
10.3.
Transitivization
.................................................................................413
10.3.1.
The morphological causative
.......................................................413
10.3.2.
Unmarked transitivization
...........................................................414
10.4.
The reflexive and transitivity
............................................................416
11.
Complement clauses
.............................................................................421
11.1.
Types of complement clause
.............................................................421
11.2.
Modality verbs
..................................................................................425
11.3.
Manipulative verbs
............................................................................429
11.4.
Perception verbs
................................................................................438
11.5.
Verbs of speech and cognition
..........................................................443
11.5.1.
Direct versus indirect speech
.......................................................443
11.5.2.
Na complements
..........................................................................446
11.5.3.
Question complements
................................................................452
11.6.
Sentential subjects
.............................................................................457
11.7.
The status of complement clauses
.....................................................460
12.
Focus and topic constructions
..............................................................467
12.1.
Focus constructions
...........................................................................467
12.1.1.
The cleft focus construction
........................................................468
12.1.2.
Cleft focus constructions in
copular
clauses
................................475
12.1.3.
The
contrastive
genitive construction
..........................................477
12.2.
Topic constructions
...........................................................................478
12.2.1.
Introducing important new topics with clefts
..............................478
12.2.2.
Left dislocation
...........................................................................479
12.2.3.
The topic marker
kònì
.................................................................484
13.
Relative clauses
...................................................................................487
13.1.
Basic structure and function of relative clauses
................................487
13.2.
The coding of the relativized noun phrase
........................................491
13.2.1.
Fronted relativized noun phrases
.................................................491
13.2.2.
Clause internal relativized noun phrases
.....................................498
13.3.
The coreferential noun phrase in the main clause
.............................501
13.4.
Non-referential relativized noun phrases
...........................................505
13.4.1.
Distributive relativized noun phrases
..........................................505
13.4.2.
Conditional relative clauses
.........................................................507
13.4.3.
Relative clauses modifying predicate
nominais
...........................510
13.5.
Clauses modifying referential indefinite noun phrases
......................511
Contents xv
13.6. Negative relative
clauses
...................................................................512
13.7.
The syntactic status of
relative
clauses
.............................................513
14.
Non-declarative speech acts
.................................................................517
14.1.
Manipulative speech acts
..................................................................518
14.1.1.
Bare imperatives
......................................................................520
14.1.2.
Subjunctive imperatives
..............................................................522
14.1.3.
Prohibitives
.................................................................................524
14.1.4.
Hortatives
....................................................................................524
14.2.
Questions
..........................................................................................526
14.2.1.
Yes/no questions
.........................................................................527
14.2.1.1.
Basic structure of yes/no questions
........................................527
14.2.1.2.
Bias in yes/no questions
........................................................529
14.2.1.3.
Focus in yes/no questions
......................................................530
14.2.1.4.
Alternative questions
.............................................................532
14.2.2.
Constituent questions
...................................................................532
14.2.2.1.
Basic structure of constituent questions
.................................533
14.2.2.2.
jò
who, whom, whose
.........................................................536
14.2.2.3.
jiaůá
what
............................................................................537
14.2.2.4.
dì
how
.................................................................................538
14.2.2.5.
jùùlì
how much, how many
.................................................539
14.2.2.6.
Interrogative determiners
.......................................................540
14.2.2.7.
tea where
............................................................................541
14.2.3.
Complex questions
......................................................................542
14.2.4.
What about...? questions
...........................................................545
14.2.5.
The non-interrogative use of questions
........................................547
15.
Interclausal connections
.......................................................................549
15.1.
Adverbial clauses
..............................................................................549
15.1.1.
Time clauses
................................................................................550
15.1.1.1.
Realis
when clauses
............................................................551
15.1.1.2. Irrealis
when clauses
...........................................................553
15.1.1.3.
Before clauses
.....................................................................555
15.1.1.4.
After clauses
.......................................................................556
15.1.1.5.
Simultaneous time clauses
.....................................................558
15.1.1.6.
Till clauses
..........................................................................561
15.1.1.7.
Since clauses
.......................................................................564
15.1.2.
Locative clauses
..........................................................................566
15.1.3.
Manner clauses
............................................................................567
15.1.4.
Comparison clauses
.....................................................................568
15.1.5.
Conditional clauses
.....................................................................570
15.1.5.1.
Simple
irreális
conditionals
...................................................571
15.1.5.2.
Low probability conditionals
.................................................572
15.1.5.3.
Negative conditionals
............................................................574
xvi
Contents
15.1.5.4.
Counterfactual conditionals
...................................................576
15.1.5.5.
Concessive conditionals
.........................................................578
15.1.5.6.
Other uses of the conditional
.................................................580
15.1.6.
Reason and result clauses
............................................................580
15.1.7.
Concessive clauses
......................................................................582
15.1.8.
Substitutive
clauses
.....................................................................584
15.1.9.
Additive clauses
..........................................................................585
15.1.10.
Purpose clauses
.........................................................................585
15.1.11.
The discourse-thematic function of adverbial clauses
...............588
15.2.
Coordinate clauses
............................................................................591
15.2.1.
Paraphrase
...................................................................................591
15.2.2.
Contrast
.......................................................................................592
15.2.3.
Disjunction
..................................................................................596
15.3.
Clause chaining in narrative
..............................................................597
15.3.1.
The narrative auxiliary and finiteness
.........................................598
15.3.2.
Switch reference
.........................................................................602
Appendix
1:
Texts
......................................................................................607
Appendix
2:
Vocabulary
............................................................................675
Notes
..........................................................................................................701
References
.................................................................................................738
Subject index
.............................................................................................745
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Carlson, Robert |
author_GND | (DE-588)107264780X |
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callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
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dewey-ones | 496 - African languages |
dewey-raw | 496/.35 |
dewey-search | 496/.35 |
dewey-sort | 3496 235 |
dewey-tens | 490 - Other languages |
discipline | Außereuropäische Sprachen und Literaturen Literaturwissenschaft |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV009719213 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T17:39:47Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 3110140578 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-006429777 |
oclc_num | 30895666 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-11 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-11 DE-188 |
physical | XIX, 766 S. Kt. |
publishDate | 1994 |
publishDateSearch | 1994 |
publishDateSort | 1994 |
publisher | Mouton de Gruyter |
record_format | marc |
series | Mouton grammar library |
series2 | Mouton grammar library |
spelling | Carlson, Robert Verfasser (DE-588)107264780X aut A grammar of Supyire Robert Carlson Berlin u.a. Mouton de Gruyter 1994 XIX, 766 S. Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Mouton grammar library 14 Literaturverz. S. 738 - 744 Suppire gtt Grammatik Suppire language Grammar Suppire-Sprache (DE-588)4354405-8 gnd rswk-swf Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd rswk-swf Suppire-Sprache (DE-588)4354405-8 s Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 s DE-604 Mouton grammar library 14 (DE-604)BV000018422 14 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=006429777&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Carlson, Robert A grammar of Supyire Mouton grammar library Suppire gtt Grammatik Suppire language Grammar Suppire-Sprache (DE-588)4354405-8 gnd Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4354405-8 (DE-588)4021806-5 |
title | A grammar of Supyire |
title_auth | A grammar of Supyire |
title_exact_search | A grammar of Supyire |
title_full | A grammar of Supyire Robert Carlson |
title_fullStr | A grammar of Supyire Robert Carlson |
title_full_unstemmed | A grammar of Supyire Robert Carlson |
title_short | A grammar of Supyire |
title_sort | a grammar of supyire |
topic | Suppire gtt Grammatik Suppire language Grammar Suppire-Sprache (DE-588)4354405-8 gnd Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Suppire Grammatik Suppire language Grammar Suppire-Sprache |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=006429777&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000018422 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT carlsonrobert agrammarofsupyire |