A grammar of Yeyi: a bantu language of Southern Africa
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Format: | Abschlussarbeit Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Köln
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2008
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Schriftenreihe: | Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen
33 |
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Beschreibung: | 464 S. graph. Darst. 240 mm x 160 mm |
ISBN: | 9783896455499 |
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100 | 1 | |a Seidel, Frank |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a A grammar of Yeyi |b a bantu language of Southern Africa |c Frank Seidel |
264 | 1 | |a Köln |b Köppe |c 2008 | |
300 | |a 464 S. |b graph. Darst. |c 240 mm x 160 mm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 1 | |a Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen |v 33 | |
502 | |a Zugl.: Köln, Univ., Diss., 2007 | ||
650 | 4 | |a Grammatik | |
650 | 4 | |a Yeyi language |x Grammar | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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Contents
Glossing, transcription, abbreviations and conventions 14
Tables and Figures 18
1. Introduction 21
1.1 Yeyi 21
1.1.1 Sociolinguistic situation 21
1.1.2 Classification 22
1.1.3 Previous works on Yeyi grammar 23
1.2 Theoretical framework 23
1.3 Techniques of data collection and analysis 24
1.4 Structure of this grammar 26
2. Phonology 27
2.1 Introduction 27
2.2 Phoneme inventory 27
2.2.1 Vowels 27
2.2.2 Consonants 33
2.3 Phonotactics, syllables, and assimilation processes 44
2.3.1 Phonotactics, segmental sequences, and root structure 44
2.3.2 Assimilation processes 46
2.4 Prosodology 54
2.4.1 Introduction 54
2.4.2 Combining intensity-increases and tone 55
2.4.3 The prosodemes and their prosodological components 57
2.4.4 Mapping of a tone-stress pattern on a lexeme and word demarcation 62
2.4.5 The base form of the semantically distinctive prosodemes on the citation
forms 64
2.4.6 Interaction of stress placement, tone patterning, and segmental form 75
2.4.7 Prosodological effects of the predicative extra high tone 81
2.4.8 Reduplicated stems and compounds 88
2.4.9 Lexemes with deviant prosodological patterns 89
2.4.10 Towards a syntactical analysis of tonal interaction of prosodemes 93
3. Nominals 101
3.1 Introduction 101
3.2 Noun classes 101
3.2.1 Noun classes, syntactical agreement, and morphosyntactical locus of
encoding 101
3.2.2 Assignment of lexical items to noun classes 102
3.2.3 Further grammatical functions covered by noun classes 103
3.3 , Nouns 106
3.3.1 Morphology and morphotactics 106
3.3.2 Nominal derivation 129
9
3.4 Adjectives 138
3.4.1 Introduction 138
3.4.2 Formal features 140
3.4.3 Adjectival categories 141
3.4.4 Functions and syntactic issues concerning adjectives marked by simple
prefixes 145
3.4.5 Functions of adjectives marked by complex prefixes 146
3.4.6 Comparison of attributive use of adjectives marked by simple or complex
prefixes 147
3.4.7 Further issues concerning adjectivally used verbal stems 148
4. Minor word categories 151
4.1 Associative clitic 151
4.1.1 Introduction 151
4.1.2 Form and morphosyntax 151
4.1.3 Range of functions: possession and beyond 154
4.1.4 The selective clitic i-in combination with associative phrases 155
4.2 Numerals and quantificational modifiers 156
4.2.1 Introduction 156
4.2.2 Numerals and constructions indicating numerical concepts 157
4.2.3 Other quantificational operations and elements 160
4.3 Possessive pronouns 163
4.3.1 Introduction 163
4.3.2 Simple possessive pronouns 163
4.3.3 Complex possessive pronouns 166
4.3.4 Functions and some syntactical issues concerning the simple and complex
possessive pronouns 166
4.3.5 Predicative possessive pronouns 167
4.4 Substitutive pronouns 167
4.4.1 Introduction 167
4.4.2 Formal, morphosyntactical, and prosodological aspects of the substitutive
pronouns 168
4.4.3 Functional issues concerning the substitutive pronouns 169
4.4.4 A note on the differences between monosyllabic substitutive pronouns and
monosyllabic demonstrative pronouns 172
4.4.5 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns combined with na- (Comitative) 173
4.4.6 The locative class 17 in use with the monosyllabic substitutive pronouns 174
4.5 Demonstrative pronouns 174
4.5.1 Introduction 174
4.5.2 Formal, morphosyntactical, and prosodological aspects of demonstrative
pronouns 176
4.5.3 Performative prosodology of demonstrative pronouns as it presented itself
in elicitation and in syntactical position of the subject 179
4.5.4 Basic semantics and functions of the three formal types of demonstrative
pronouns 183
4.5.5 Further functions of the demonstratives 186
4.5.6 The use of the 'glottalized' vowel reduplication 188
10
4.5.7 Syntactical position of demonstrative pronouns 190
4.6. Demonstratives of manner 191
4.6.1 General points 191
4.6.2 The final vowel reduplication 192
4.6.3 Demonstratives of manner with verbal morphology 192
4.7 Interrogatives 193
4.7.1 Introduction 193
4.7.2 Interrogative pronouns 193
4.7.3 Other question words 198
4.8 Further pronouns and modifiers 201
4.8.1 Introduction 201
4.8.2 The reflexive pronoun -(i)ne 201
4.8.3 -mwe 'other' 202
5. Adverbs, adverbials, syntactic and prepositional clitics, conjuctions,
and other syntactical elements 205
5.1 Introduction 205
5.2 Adverbs and adverbials 205
5.2.1 Introduction 205
5.2.2 Adverbs 205
5.2.3 Adverbials 207
5.3 Syntactical clitics 210
5.3.1 Clausal clitics 210
5.3.2 Prepositional clitics 212
5.4 Non-clitic conjunctions and further syntactical elements 214
5.4.1 Elements marking conditional sentences 214
5.4.2 Other conjunctions 215
5.4.3 Further words 222
6. Verbs 225
6.1 Introduction 225
6.2 Verbal structure 225
6.2.1 Verbal root, verbal stems, and morphotactics of the finite verb 225
6.2.2 Subject and object concords 226
6.3. Verbal derivation 228
6.3.1 Introduction 228
6.3.2 Applicative 229
6.3.3 Causatives 238
6.3.4 Neutro-passive extensions 242
6.3.5 Reversive extensions 246
6.3.6 Extensive extensions 250
6.3.7 Associative extension 255
11
6.3.8 Frequentative extension 257
6.3.9 Passive extension 258
6.3.10 Contactive extension 258
6.3.11 Positional extension 259
6.3.12 Reduplication 259
6.3.13 Extensions on verbs marked by the empty morphs i/ra- 266
6.3.14 De-nominal derivation 268
6.4 Verb categorization ('Aktionsart*) 268
6.4.1 Introduction 268
6.4.2 Verb categories 270
6.4.3 Fluidity of category membership 276
6.5 Tense, aspect, and mode 278
6.5.1 Introduction 278
6.5.2 Inflection for tense, aspect, and mode 280
6.5.3 Co-occurring inflectional markers 342
6.5.4 Temporal, aspectual, modal clitics and particles, and combinations with
auxiliaries pertaining directly to the TAM domain 346
6.6 The inflectional tense-aspect verb tenses and the pragmatics of past
narratives 358
6.6.1 Introduction 358
6.6.2 The analysis of the tense-aspect morphology in Yeyi past narrative discourse
before a backdrop of Botne and Kershner's cognitive framework 361
6.6.3 The semantics and functions of Yeyi tenses in past narrative discourse 368
6.6.4 Conclusion 397
6.7 Constructions and forms used in verbal negation 399
6.7.1 Introduction 399
6.7.2 Negation with yemwa 400
6.7.3 Negation with kamuni 402
6.7.4 Constructions with the negative adjectival copula -qhu 403
6.7.5 Inflectional negation 405
7. Predication 411
7.1 Introduction 411
7.2 Nominal predication 411
7.2.1 Prosodologically marked non-verbal predication 411
7.2.2 The invariant selective clitic i= as predicative copula 413
7.2.3 Predications with the invariant copula ndi= 415
7.2.4 iN- with associatively marked noun phrases and the reflexive pronouns 416
7.2.5 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns marked by the predicative copula iN- 418
7.2.6 The invariant past copulative marker kati 418
7.2.7 Copular verbs 419
7.2.8 Negative nominal predication 426
7.3 Verbal predication 430
7.3.1 Introduction 430
12
7.3.2 Constructions with the past copula kari 430
7.3.3 Verbal predications with auxiliaries 436
7.3.4 Comparative and superlative constructions with —baraH 'surpass' 439
7.3.5 Impersonal constructions 440
8. Relative constructions 443
8.1 Introduction 443
8.2 Relative construction in which the head of the relative clause and the subject
of the relative clause are identical 443
8.3 Relative construction in which the head of the relative clause and the subject
of the relative clause are not identical 445
8.4 Locative relatives indicating temporal relations 447
8.5 Other relative constructions 448
8.6 Negative relative tenses 448
References 451
Appendix 457
Index 461
13
Tables and figures
Tables
Table 1 Lexemes with and without vowel nasalization
Table 2 Non-prenasalized egressive consonants
Table 3 Prenasalized egressive consonants
Table 4 Ingressive consonants
Table 5 Glottalized ingressive consonants
Table 6 Consonant-glide combinations
Table 7 Singular/Plural pairings of noun classes
Table 8 Overview of nominal prefixes and semantic nuclei of noun classes
Table 9 Allomorphical noun class prefixes in front of roots starting with long vowels
Table 10 Derivational functions of noun classes in noun-to-noun derivation
Table 11 Simple adjectival prefixes
Table 12 Complex adjectival prefixes
Table 13 Core adjectival roots
Table 14 Adjectival roots generally accepted to designate human beings as nouns in
classes 1/2
Table 15 Fossilized derivations from verbs
Table 16 Verbal stems commonly used with adjectival morphology
Table 17 Associative clitics
Table 18 Associative clitics in front of vowel-initial words
Table 19 Paradigms for prefixes for the numerical roots of the numbers 1-4
Table 20 Suppletive series for uwundji^
Table 21 Paradigm for koo- + substitutive pronoun
Table 22 -eeke with concordial prefixes
Table 23 Simple concord paradigm for possessive pronouns
Table 24 Paradigm of possessive bases
Table 25 Paradigm for the fused forms of the 2nd person singular possessive
pronoun
Table 26 Enumerative and predicative forms for NP's with possessive pronouns
Table 27 Further enumerative and predicative forms for NP's with possessive
pronouns
Table 28 Enumerative and predicative forms for NP's with the 2nd person singular
pronoun
Table 29 Complex concord paradigm for possessive pronouns
Table 30 Monosyllabic and disyllabic substitutive pronouns
Table 31 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns prefixed by class 17 ku-
Table 32 Demonstrative pronoun prefixes
Table 33 Simple demonstrative pronouns
Table 34 Emphatic demonstrative pronouns
Table 35 Confirmative demonstrative pronouns
Table 36 Demonstratives of manner
Table 37 Demonstratives of manner with vowel reduplication
Table 38 Concordial paradigm for the interrogative pronoun -re
Table 39 Paradigm of reflexive pronouns
Table 40 Prefix paradigm for -mwe 'other'
Table 41 Slots of the verb form
Table 42 Subject concords
Table 43 Object concords
Table 44 Derivational morphemes
Table 45 Stems that undergo vowel harmony
29
33
38
41
42
43
103
105
107
129
140
141
142
143
143
144
152
153
157
160
161
162
163
163
164
165
165
165
166
168
174
176
177
178
179
191
192
196
201
202
226
227
227
229
297
18
Table 46 Anterior forms of monosyllabic inflectional stems (1) 297
Table 47 Anterior forms of monosyllabic inflectional stems (2) 297
Table 48 Verbs that take the fossilized anterior 337
Table 49 Cognitive space according to Botne and Kershner (2006) 365
Table 50 General past negation and forms that indicate 'never do X' 407
Table 51 Associatives preceded by iN- (1) 416
Table 52 Associatives preceded by iN-(2) 417
Table 53 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns marked by the clitic i(N)- 418
Table 54 Relative clitics 445
Table 55 Simple verb tenses 458
Table 56 Constructions with TAM semantics 460
Table 57 Constructions with auxiliary -tikya/o 460
Figures
Figure 1 Basic concepts of moving ego (a) and moving time (b) 363
Figure 2 P-Domain (S = speech locus, E = event locus) 364
Figure 3 Past D-Domain (S — speech locus, E = event locus) 364
Figure 4 Cognitive representation of present tense 369
Figure 5 Cognitive representation of hodiernal past perfective 374
Figure 6 Cognitive representation of hodiernal anterior 378
Figure 7 Cognitive representation of mainline events in hodiernal past 379
Figure 8 Cognitive representation of prehodiernal anterior (1) 384
Figure 9 Cognitive representation of prehodiernal anterior (2) 384
Figure 10 Cognitive representation of mainline events in prehodiernal past 387
Figure 11 Cognitive representation of experiential anterior 388
Figure 12 Cognitive representation of associative and dissociative past and present
domains 399
19 |
adam_txt |
Contents
Glossing, transcription, abbreviations and conventions 14
Tables and Figures 18
1. Introduction 21
1.1 Yeyi 21
1.1.1 Sociolinguistic situation 21
1.1.2 Classification 22
1.1.3 Previous works on Yeyi grammar 23
1.2 Theoretical framework 23
1.3 Techniques of data collection and analysis 24
1.4 Structure of this grammar 26
2. Phonology 27
2.1 Introduction 27
2.2 Phoneme inventory 27
2.2.1 Vowels 27
2.2.2 Consonants 33
2.3 Phonotactics, syllables, and assimilation processes 44
2.3.1 Phonotactics, segmental sequences, and root structure 44
2.3.2 Assimilation processes 46
2.4 Prosodology 54
2.4.1 Introduction 54
2.4.2 Combining intensity-increases and tone 55
2.4.3 The prosodemes and their prosodological components 57
2.4.4 Mapping of a tone-stress pattern on a lexeme and word demarcation 62
2.4.5 The base form of the semantically distinctive prosodemes on the citation
forms 64
2.4.6 Interaction of stress placement, tone patterning, and segmental form 75
2.4.7 Prosodological effects of the predicative extra high tone 81
2.4.8 Reduplicated stems and compounds 88
2.4.9 Lexemes with deviant prosodological patterns 89
2.4.10 Towards a syntactical analysis of tonal interaction of prosodemes 93
3. Nominals 101
3.1 Introduction 101
3.2 Noun classes 101
3.2.1 Noun classes, syntactical agreement, and morphosyntactical locus of
encoding 101
3.2.2 Assignment of lexical items to noun classes 102
3.2.3 Further grammatical functions covered by noun classes 103
3.3 , Nouns 106
3.3.1 Morphology and morphotactics 106
3.3.2 Nominal derivation 129
9
3.4 Adjectives 138
3.4.1 Introduction 138
3.4.2 Formal features 140
3.4.3 Adjectival categories 141
3.4.4 Functions and syntactic issues concerning adjectives marked by simple
prefixes 145
3.4.5 Functions of adjectives marked by complex prefixes 146
3.4.6 Comparison of attributive use of adjectives marked by simple or complex
prefixes 147
3.4.7 Further issues concerning adjectivally used verbal stems 148
4. Minor word categories 151
4.1 Associative clitic 151
4.1.1 Introduction 151
4.1.2 Form and morphosyntax 151
4.1.3 Range of functions: possession and beyond 154
4.1.4 The selective clitic i-in combination with associative phrases 155
4.2 Numerals and quantificational modifiers 156
4.2.1 Introduction 156
4.2.2 Numerals and constructions indicating numerical concepts 157
4.2.3 Other quantificational operations and elements 160
4.3 Possessive pronouns 163
4.3.1 Introduction 163
4.3.2 Simple possessive pronouns 163
4.3.3 Complex possessive pronouns 166
4.3.4 Functions and some syntactical issues concerning the simple and complex
possessive pronouns 166
4.3.5 Predicative possessive pronouns 167
4.4 Substitutive pronouns 167
4.4.1 Introduction 167
4.4.2 Formal, morphosyntactical, and prosodological aspects of the substitutive
pronouns 168
4.4.3 Functional issues concerning the substitutive pronouns 169
4.4.4 A note on the differences between monosyllabic substitutive pronouns and
monosyllabic demonstrative pronouns 172
4.4.5 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns combined with na- (Comitative) 173
4.4.6 The locative class 17 in use with the monosyllabic substitutive pronouns 174
4.5 Demonstrative pronouns 174
4.5.1 Introduction 174
4.5.2 Formal, morphosyntactical, and prosodological aspects of demonstrative
pronouns 176
4.5.3 Performative prosodology of demonstrative pronouns as it presented itself
in elicitation and in syntactical position of the subject 179
4.5.4 Basic semantics and functions of the three formal types of demonstrative
pronouns 183
4.5.5 Further functions of the demonstratives 186
4.5.6 The use of the 'glottalized' vowel reduplication 188
10
4.5.7 Syntactical position of demonstrative pronouns 190
4.6. Demonstratives of manner 191
4.6.1 General points 191
4.6.2 The final vowel reduplication 192
4.6.3 Demonstratives of manner with verbal morphology 192
4.7 Interrogatives 193
4.7.1 Introduction 193
4.7.2 Interrogative pronouns 193
4.7.3 Other question words 198
4.8 Further pronouns and modifiers 201
4.8.1 Introduction 201
4.8.2 The reflexive pronoun -(i)ne 201
4.8.3 -mwe 'other' 202
5. Adverbs, adverbials, syntactic and prepositional clitics, conjuctions,
and other syntactical elements 205
5.1 Introduction 205
5.2 Adverbs and adverbials 205
5.2.1 Introduction 205
5.2.2 Adverbs 205
5.2.3 Adverbials 207
5.3 Syntactical clitics 210
5.3.1 Clausal clitics 210
5.3.2 Prepositional clitics 212
5.4 Non-clitic conjunctions and further syntactical elements 214
5.4.1 Elements marking conditional sentences 214
5.4.2 Other conjunctions 215
5.4.3 Further words 222
6. Verbs 225
6.1 Introduction 225
6.2 Verbal structure 225
6.2.1 Verbal root, verbal stems, and morphotactics of the finite verb 225
6.2.2 Subject and object concords 226
6.3. Verbal derivation 228
6.3.1 Introduction 228
6.3.2 Applicative 229
6.3.3 Causatives 238
6.3.4 Neutro-passive extensions 242
6.3.5 Reversive extensions 246
6.3.6 Extensive extensions 250
6.3.7 Associative extension 255
11
6.3.8 Frequentative extension 257
6.3.9 Passive extension 258
6.3.10 Contactive extension 258
6.3.11 Positional extension 259
6.3.12 Reduplication 259
6.3.13 Extensions on verbs marked by the empty morphs i/ra- 266
6.3.14 De-nominal derivation 268
6.4 Verb categorization ('Aktionsart*) 268
6.4.1 Introduction 268
6.4.2 Verb categories 270
6.4.3 Fluidity of category membership 276
6.5 Tense, aspect, and mode 278
6.5.1 Introduction 278
6.5.2 Inflection for tense, aspect, and mode 280
6.5.3 Co-occurring inflectional markers 342
6.5.4 Temporal, aspectual, modal clitics and particles, and combinations with
auxiliaries pertaining directly to the TAM domain 346
6.6 The inflectional tense-aspect verb tenses and the pragmatics of past
narratives 358
6.6.1 Introduction 358
6.6.2 The analysis of the tense-aspect morphology in Yeyi past narrative discourse
before a backdrop of Botne and Kershner's cognitive framework 361
6.6.3 The semantics and functions of Yeyi tenses in past narrative discourse 368
6.6.4 Conclusion 397
6.7 Constructions and forms used in verbal negation 399
6.7.1 Introduction 399
6.7.2 Negation with yemwa 400
6.7.3 Negation with kamuni 402
6.7.4 Constructions with the negative adjectival copula -qhu 403
6.7.5 Inflectional negation 405
7. Predication 411
7.1 Introduction 411
7.2 Nominal predication 411
7.2.1 Prosodologically marked non-verbal predication 411
7.2.2 The invariant selective clitic i= as predicative copula 413
7.2.3 Predications with the invariant copula ndi= 415
7.2.4 iN- with associatively marked noun phrases and the reflexive pronouns 416
7.2.5 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns marked by the predicative copula iN- 418
7.2.6 The invariant past copulative marker kati 418
7.2.7 Copular verbs 419
7.2.8 Negative nominal predication 426
7.3 Verbal predication 430
7.3.1 Introduction 430
12
7.3.2 Constructions with the past copula kari 430
7.3.3 Verbal predications with auxiliaries 436
7.3.4 Comparative and superlative constructions with —baraH 'surpass' 439
7.3.5 Impersonal constructions 440
8. Relative constructions 443
8.1 Introduction 443
8.2 Relative construction in which the head of the relative clause and the subject
of the relative clause are identical 443
8.3 Relative construction in which the head of the relative clause and the subject
of the relative clause are not identical 445
8.4 Locative relatives indicating temporal relations 447
8.5 Other relative constructions 448
8.6 Negative relative tenses 448
References 451
Appendix 457
Index 461
13
Tables and figures
Tables
Table 1 Lexemes with and without vowel nasalization
Table 2 Non-prenasalized egressive consonants
Table 3 Prenasalized egressive consonants
Table 4 Ingressive consonants
Table 5 Glottalized ingressive consonants
Table 6 Consonant-glide combinations
Table 7 Singular/Plural pairings of noun classes
Table 8 Overview of nominal prefixes and semantic nuclei of noun classes
Table 9 Allomorphical noun class prefixes in front of roots starting with long vowels
Table 10 Derivational functions of noun classes in noun-to-noun derivation
Table 11 Simple adjectival prefixes
Table 12 Complex adjectival prefixes
Table 13 Core adjectival roots
Table 14 Adjectival roots generally accepted to designate human beings as nouns in
classes 1/2
Table 15 Fossilized derivations from verbs
Table 16 Verbal stems commonly used with adjectival morphology
Table 17 Associative clitics
Table 18 Associative clitics in front of vowel-initial words
Table 19 Paradigms for prefixes for the numerical roots of the numbers 1-4
Table 20 Suppletive series for uwundji^
Table 21 Paradigm for koo- + substitutive pronoun
Table 22 -eeke with concordial prefixes
Table 23 Simple concord paradigm for possessive pronouns
Table 24 Paradigm of possessive bases
Table 25 Paradigm for the fused forms of the 2nd person singular possessive
pronoun
Table 26 Enumerative and predicative forms for NP's with possessive pronouns
Table 27 Further enumerative and predicative forms for NP's with possessive
pronouns
Table 28 Enumerative and predicative forms for NP's with the 2nd person singular
pronoun
Table 29 Complex concord paradigm for possessive pronouns
Table 30 Monosyllabic and disyllabic substitutive pronouns
Table 31 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns prefixed by class 17 ku-
Table 32 Demonstrative pronoun prefixes
Table 33 Simple demonstrative pronouns
Table 34 Emphatic demonstrative pronouns
Table 35 Confirmative demonstrative pronouns
Table 36 Demonstratives of manner
Table 37 Demonstratives of manner with vowel reduplication
Table 38 Concordial paradigm for the interrogative pronoun -re
Table 39 Paradigm of reflexive pronouns
Table 40 Prefix paradigm for -mwe 'other'
Table 41 Slots of the verb form
Table 42 Subject concords
Table 43 Object concords
Table 44 Derivational morphemes
Table 45 Stems that undergo vowel harmony
29
33
38
41
42
43
103
105
107
129
140
141
142
143
143
144
152
153
157
160
161
162
163
163
164
165
165
165
166
168
174
176
177
178
179
191
192
196
201
202
226
227
227
229
297
18
Table 46 Anterior forms of monosyllabic inflectional stems (1) 297
Table 47 Anterior forms of monosyllabic inflectional stems (2) 297
Table 48 Verbs that take the fossilized anterior 337
Table 49 Cognitive space according to Botne and Kershner (2006) 365
Table 50 General past negation and forms that indicate 'never do X' 407
Table 51 Associatives preceded by iN- (1) 416
Table 52 Associatives preceded by iN-(2) 417
Table 53 Monosyllabic substitutive pronouns marked by the clitic i(N)- 418
Table 54 Relative clitics 445
Table 55 Simple verb tenses 458
Table 56 Constructions with TAM semantics 460
Table 57 Constructions with auxiliary -tikya/o 460
Figures
Figure 1 Basic concepts of moving ego (a) and moving time (b) 363
Figure 2 P-Domain (S = speech locus, E = event locus) 364
Figure 3 Past D-Domain (S — speech locus, E = event locus) 364
Figure 4 Cognitive representation of present tense 369
Figure 5 Cognitive representation of hodiernal past perfective 374
Figure 6 Cognitive representation of hodiernal anterior 378
Figure 7 Cognitive representation of mainline events in hodiernal past 379
Figure 8 Cognitive representation of prehodiernal anterior (1) 384
Figure 9 Cognitive representation of prehodiernal anterior (2) 384
Figure 10 Cognitive representation of mainline events in prehodiernal past 387
Figure 11 Cognitive representation of experiential anterior 388
Figure 12 Cognitive representation of associative and dissociative past and present
domains 399
19 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Seidel, Frank |
author_facet | Seidel, Frank |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Seidel, Frank |
author_variant | f s fs |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035117628 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
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callnumber-subject | PL - Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania |
classification_rvk | EP 19845 EP 19846 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)244654492 (DE-599)DNB989058964 |
dewey-full | 496.399 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 496 - African languages |
dewey-raw | 496.399 |
dewey-search | 496.399 |
dewey-sort | 3496.399 |
dewey-tens | 490 - Other languages |
discipline | Außereuropäische Sprachen und Literaturen Literaturwissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Außereuropäische Sprachen und Literaturen Literaturwissenschaft |
format | Thesis Book |
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genre_facet | Hochschulschrift |
id | DE-604.BV035117628 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:20:11Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-20T09:53:25Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783896455499 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016785351 |
oclc_num | 244654492 |
open_access_boolean | |
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owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29 DE-703 DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | 464 S. graph. Darst. 240 mm x 160 mm |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Köppe |
record_format | marc |
series | Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen |
series2 | Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen |
spelling | Seidel, Frank Verfasser aut A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa Frank Seidel Köln Köppe 2008 464 S. graph. Darst. 240 mm x 160 mm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen 33 Zugl.: Köln, Univ., Diss., 2007 Grammatik Yeyi language Grammar Yeye-Sprache (DE-588)4416888-3 gnd rswk-swf Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4113937-9 Hochschulschrift gnd-content Yeye-Sprache (DE-588)4416888-3 s Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 s DE-604 Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen 33 (DE-604)BV004132539 33 text/html http://deposit.dnb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=3122189&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm Inhaltstext HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016785351&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Seidel, Frank A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen Grammatik Yeyi language Grammar Yeye-Sprache (DE-588)4416888-3 gnd Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4416888-3 (DE-588)4021806-5 (DE-588)4113937-9 |
title | A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa |
title_auth | A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa |
title_exact_search | A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa |
title_exact_search_txtP | A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa |
title_full | A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa Frank Seidel |
title_fullStr | A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa Frank Seidel |
title_full_unstemmed | A grammar of Yeyi a bantu language of Southern Africa Frank Seidel |
title_short | A grammar of Yeyi |
title_sort | a grammar of yeyi a bantu language of southern africa |
title_sub | a bantu language of Southern Africa |
topic | Grammatik Yeyi language Grammar Yeye-Sprache (DE-588)4416888-3 gnd Grammatik (DE-588)4021806-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Grammatik Yeyi language Grammar Yeye-Sprache Hochschulschrift |
url | http://deposit.dnb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=3122189&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016785351&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV004132539 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT seidelfrank agrammarofyeyiabantulanguageofsouthernafrica |