Mali (Baining) grammar: a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Canberra
Pacific Linguistics, College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University
2011
|
Schriftenreihe: | Pacific linguistics
623 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Mali (2,200 speakers) is a Papuan language spoken on the Gazelle Peninsula, East New Britain Province Papua New Guinea. It is a member of the Baining language family. The family is comprised of five languages: Kaket, Mali, Simbali, Ura and Kairak. Baining people share a common non-Austronesian ancestral language and similar cultural practices (such as fire dances). An interesting feature of these languages is that they show a great deal of influence from their early Austronesian neighbors. As detailed in the grammar, Mali has characteristics of both the Western Oceanic branch of Austronesian and Trans New Guinea. This is the first comprehensive grammar for a language from the family and provides a framework for further comparative and descriptive research in the region. The grammar was produced in cooperation with members of the Mali (Baining) community and is being published alongside a dictionary and text collection (also available from Pacific Linguistics). Includes bibliographical references (p. 407-410) and index |
Beschreibung: | xxi, 415 p. maps 25 cm |
ISBN: | 9780858836297 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Mali (Baining) grammar |b a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea |c Tonya N. Stebbins |
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500 | |a Mali (2,200 speakers) is a Papuan language spoken on the Gazelle Peninsula, East New Britain Province Papua New Guinea. It is a member of the Baining language family. The family is comprised of five languages: Kaket, Mali, Simbali, Ura and Kairak. Baining people share a common non-Austronesian ancestral language and similar cultural practices (such as fire dances). An interesting feature of these languages is that they show a great deal of influence from their early Austronesian neighbors. As detailed in the grammar, Mali has characteristics of both the Western Oceanic branch of Austronesian and Trans New Guinea. This is the first comprehensive grammar for a language from the family and provides a framework for further comparative and descriptive research in the region. The grammar was produced in cooperation with members of the Mali (Baining) community and is being published alongside a dictionary and text collection (also available from Pacific Linguistics). | ||
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references (p. 407-410) and index | ||
650 | 4 | |a Grammatik | |
650 | 4 | |a Sprache | |
650 | 4 | |a Baining language |x Grammar | |
650 | 4 | |a Baining (Papua New Guinean people) |x Languages | |
653 | |a Australian | ||
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adam_text | Mali (Baining) grammar:
a language of the East New Britain
Province, Papua New Guinea
Tonya N Stebbins
CJ3
fffi
Pacific Linguistics
College of Asia and the Pacific
The Australian National University
Table of contents
Acknowledgements xv
List of abbreviations xvii
Map 1: Area map of East Papuan languages xx
Map 2: Local map of Papuan languages in East New Britain Province xxi
Chapter 1: Introduction: the language and it s speakers 1
1 1 Geographic location and history 2
1 2 Previous writing on the Baining people 2
1 3 Dialects of Mali 3
1 4 Present day language contact 4
1 5 Language vitality 4
1 6 Social organisation 5
1 7 Subsistence 5
1 8 Fieldwork situation 6
1 9 About the data 7
1 10 Theoretical orientation 8
Chapter 2: Typological overview 10
2 1 Phonetics and phonology 10
2 2 Word classes and morphological categories 12
2 3 Nominals 13
2 4 Directionals 14
2 5 Clause and predicate structure 14
2 6 Modification to the clause 15
2 7 Clause linking 15
2 8 Discourse organisation 16
2 9 Expansion of the lexicon 16
Chapter 3: Phonetics and phonology 17
3 1 Consonants 17
311 Prenasalised voiced stops: /mb/, /d/, /°g/ 18
312 Voiceless stops: /p/, N, Dd 19
313 Fricatives:/(3/,/s/ 20
vii
Vlll
314 Nasals: /ml, Inl, /rj/ 21
315 Approximants:/w/,/J/,/j/,/u[/ 22
316 The lateral IV and trill Ivl 23
317 Minimal pairs 24
3 2 Vowels 24
3 3 Phonotactics 26
331 Syllable types 26
332 Consonant clusters in the onset 27
333 Intervocalic consonant clusters 28
334 Mali baby talk 28
3 4 Morphophonology 29
341 Phonological and morphophonological processes affecting consonants 29
342 Phonological processes affecting vowels 32
3 5 Stress 33
3 6 Phonology of clitics and compounding 34
361 Phonological words 34
362 Cliticisation and clitic groups 35
363 Grammatical words 37
3 7 Graphemes in the Mali orthography 38
3 8 The Catholic orthography first used to write Mali 40
3 9 Information about the transcription process 40
Chapter 4: Basic syntactic categories and the tense marking system 41
4 1 Basic syntactic relations 41
411 Split-S marking 41
412 Marking core arguments 42
413 Concordial pronouns 44
414 Verbs of transfer and speech act verbs 46
415 Verbless clauses 48
4 2 Tense marking system 51
421 Tense marking on the verb 51
422 Coding tense through the verb and the concordial pronoun 53
Chapter 5: Word classes 58
5 1 Lexical word classes 58
511 Verbs 59
512 Nouns 61
513 Adjectives 63
514 Adverbs 66
515 Ideophones 67
5 2 Minor word classes 67
521 Prepositions 67
522 Directionals , 68
IX
523 Pronouns heading an NP 69
524 Concordial, associative and possessive pronouns 72
525 Contrastive pronouns and the topic position 75
526 Demonstratives 76
527 Determiners 87
528 Markers of aspect and status 88
529 Clause combining morphology 91
5 2 10 Discourse markers 93
5 2 11 Interjections 94
Chapter 6: Derivation and valency changing 95
6 1 Acategoriality and conversion 95
611 Noun/verb pairs 96
612 Noun/adjective pairs 97
613 Verbal uses of adjectives 97
6 2 Reduplication 98
621 Reduplication and onomatopoeia 98
622 Reduplication to form nouns 98
623 Reduplication to form verbs 98
624 Reduplication of adjectives 98
6 3 Compounding 99
631 Verb + noun compounds that make nouns 99
632 Verb + noun compounds that make verbs 99
633 Verb + verb compounds that make verbs 99
6 4 Derivation of adverbs 100
6 5 Transitivity and valency changing 100
651 Transitivity and valency decrease using -mes 100
652 Transitivity decrease using -na 101
653 Reciprocals 102
654 Reflexives 103
655 Strategies for encoding causation 103
Chapter 7: Prepositions and associated constructions 105
7 1 Simple prepositions in Mali 105
711 daer over 105
712 gel1 with 106
713 gelem near 106
714 mini on 107
715 we? within 107
716 na from, PREP 108
717 nani(a) for 110
718 pa LOC, BEN 110
719 pern in 111
7 1 10 per at 112
7 1 11 sa to, with 113
7 1 12 sing at the bottom of 114
7 1 13 tim THEME, GOAL, PATH 115
7 2 Morphologically complex prepositions 117
721 Other initial position prepositions 118
722 The lexicalised complex preposition snania 119
723 Complex location phrases based on seva and niva 120
7 3 Structure and distribution of PPs 120
7 4 Prepositional verbs and nouns 120
741 Formulaicity and lexicalisation in prepositional verb constructions 121
742 Stative intransitive prepositional verbs 126
743 Active intransitive prepositional verbs 128
744 Transitive prepositional verbs 128
745 Prepositional nouns 131
7 5 Semantic contribution of prepositions to prepositional verbs and nouns 132
751 Semantic contribution of preposition met within 132
752 Semantic contribution of preposition pern in 133
753 Semantic contribution of preposition per at 134
7 6 Summary 134
Chapter 8: Noun classes and gender in Mali 136
8 1 Gender in Mali 136
8 2 Mali noun classes 137
8 3 Human referents and noun class assignment 140
831 Lack of noun class marking on some address terms 141
832 Alternative plural marking on nouns with human referents 141
833 Size- and shape-based noun classes and nouns with human referents 141
834 Noun class marking on higher animates 142
8 4 Non-human referents and noun class assignment 143
841 Masculine and feminine noun class assignment 143
842 Count neutral noun class 145
843 Size-and shape-based noun classes 146
8 5 Mapping of noun class system onto gender system 149
851 Proper nouns and zero noun class marking 151
852 Human plurals and zero noun class marking 152
8 6 Markedness patterns in the noun class system 154
861 Functional markedness and non-human nouns 154
862 Functional markedness and human nouns 155
Chapter 9: Number 156
9 1 Mali number systems 156
9 2 Numerals 156
XI
9 3 Ordinals 159
9 4 Fractions 160
Chapter 10: The noun phrase 161
10 1 Outline of the general structure of the noun phrase 161
10 2 Possible heads of the NP 163
10 2 1 Common nouns 163
10 2 2 Proper nouns and kinship terms 164
10 2 3 Pronouns and demonstratives 165
10 3 NP articles 166
10 3 1 The unmarked NP article kama 168
10 3 2 NP article ma 168
10 3 3 NP article *B 169
10 3 4 Indefinite NP articles 170
10 4 Specifier article 171
10 4 1 Larger situation use 172
10 4 2 Associative-anaphoric use 172
10 4 3 Specific-indefinite use 173
10 4 4 Contexts in which the specifier article is not required 173
10 5 Demonstratives 175
10 6 Prepositional phrases and directionals 176
10 7 Peripheral modifiers 176
10 7 1 Kusek only 177
10 7 2 Mo all 178
10 7 3 Marik really, truly 178
10 8 NP coordination 179
Chapter 11: Possessive phrases 181
11 1 The possessive NP 181
11 2 Agreement in possessed NPs 183
11 3 Possessive pronouns 183
11 3 1 Possessive pronoun and speci tier article 184
11 3 2 Non-specific possessive pronouns 186
11 3 3 Indefinite possessive pronouns 186
11 3 4 Interrogative possessive pronouns 187
11 4 Special possessive relations 187
11 4 1 Possessive pronouns marking a close relationship 188
11 4 2 Inalienably possessed nouns 189
11 4 3 Special possessive pronouns for inalienable nouns 190
Chapter 12: Directionals 192
12 1 Directionals: an overview 192
12 2 Morphologically complex directionals 194
Xll
12 2 1 /- away 194
12 2 2 re- vicinity 195
12 2 3 na- back to deictic centre 195
12 2 4 Multiple derivational prefixes and directionals 195
12 2 5 Prepositions as proclitics to directionals 196
12 3 Extended uses of directionals 197
12 3 1 The vertical axis 198
12 3 2 The landform axis 199
12 3 3 Directionals encoding terminal end points 201
12 3 4 Directionals not encoding terminal end points 202
12 4 Relational nouns as directionals 203
12 5 Directionals and prepositional phrases in discourse 204
12 6 Adverbial demonstratives as location terms 205
Chapter 13: Structure of the predicate 207
13 1 Order of elements within the predicate 207
13 2 Manner adverbs 208
13 3 Other modification within the predicate 209
13 3 1 The irrealis focus particle na 210
13 3 2 Asymmetrical serial verb constructions 212
13 3 3 Multi-verb constructions • 215
Chapter 14: Adverbs and discourse markers 217
14 1 Clause-level adverbs 217
14 2 Clause-initial discourse markers 218
14 2 1 (A)S(A)-discourse markers 219
14 2 2 M- discourse markers 223
14 2 3 K- discourse markers 224
14 2 4 Other discourse markers 226
14 3 Clause-initial formulaic sequences 227
14 4 Clause-final particles 228
Chapter 15: Status and illocutionary force 230
15 1 Prosody and illocutionary force 230
15 2 Negation 233
15 2 1 Basic negation 233
15 2 2 Negation and dependent clauses 234
15 2 3 Negation in verbless clauses 235
15 2 4 Focus of negation of constituents within a clause 235
15 3 Interrogatives 237
15 3 1 Polar questions 237
15 3 2 Content questions 238
15 3 3 Question strategies based on ellipsis 243
Xlll
15 3 4 Tag questions 243
15 4 Imperatives 244
15 4 1 Imperative interpretations of declarative clauses 244
15 4 2 Prohibitives 246
Chapter 16: Clause linkage 248
16 1 Lack of distinction between main and subordinate clauses in Mali 248
16 2 Clause linking types 250
16 3 Overview of the relators 250
16 4 The relator ia 253
16 4 1 Naming clauses 253
16 4 2 Subordinate clauses equivalent to an O/So argument 254
16 4 3 Speech act verbs 258
16 4 4 NPs or clauses equivalent to NPs 258
16 4 5 Clauses or place names equivalent to location adverbials 259
16 4 6 Clauses and NPs equivalent to temporal adverbials 259
16 4 7 Clauses expanding manner adverbs and negators 261
16 5 The relator ma 263
16 5 1 Modifiers within NPs 264
16 5 2 Modifiers of adverbials 266
16 5 3 Temporal subordinatorpema as 267
16 5 4 Relationship between relator and proper noun article 267
16 5 5 Modifier to another clause 268
16 6 The relator ama 268
16 6 1 Use oiama within the NP 268
16 6 2 Use of ama following adverbials 270
Chapter 17: Coordination and subordination 272
17 1 Coordination 272
17 1 1 Additive marker da 272
17 1 2 Adversative marker dak 273
17 1 3 Disjunctive marker lira 214
11 2 Subordination 275
17 2 1 Purposive clauses 275
17 2 2 Reason clauses 277
17 2 3 Elaboration and consequence clauses 278
17 2 4 Conditional clauses 279
Chapter 18: Discourse organisation I 281
18 1 Thematisation 281
18 2 Boundary phenomena 283
18 3 Contrastive reference 285
18 3 1 Contrastive pronouns 285
XIV
18 3 2 Contrastive demonstratives 286
18 3 3 NP article ke in contrastive NPs 288
18 4 Tail-head linkage and intersentential clause chaining 288
18 5 Sentence level clause chaining 291
18 6 Ellipsis 293
Chapter 19: Discourse organisation II 295
19 1 Tense in discourse 295
19 2 Noun class marking in discourse 297
19 2 1 Anthropomorphising and noun class marking 297
19 2 2 Noun class marking and incidental entities 298
19 3 Reported speech 300
19 3 1 Speech report constructions 300
19 3 2 Distinguishing direct and indirect speech 301
19 3 3 Extensions of reported speech 304
19 4 Comparison 306
19 4 1 Comparative construction 307
19 4 2 Comparative strategy 307
19 4 3 Markers of degree 308
19 4 4 Inherently comparative lexemes 309
Chapter 20: Lexical expansion 310
20 1 Formulaic sequences 310
20 1 1 Modified NPs 310
20 1 2 Possessed NPs 312
20 1 3 Conventionalisation of clauses 314
20 2 Borrowing 315
20 3 Code-switching 316
Appendix A: Glossary 318
Appendix B: Texts 348
References 407
Index 411
|
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spelling | Stebbins, Tonya N. Verfasser aut Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea Tonya N. Stebbins Canberra Pacific Linguistics, College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University 2011 xxi, 415 p. maps 25 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Pacific linguistics 623 Mali (2,200 speakers) is a Papuan language spoken on the Gazelle Peninsula, East New Britain Province Papua New Guinea. It is a member of the Baining language family. The family is comprised of five languages: Kaket, Mali, Simbali, Ura and Kairak. Baining people share a common non-Austronesian ancestral language and similar cultural practices (such as fire dances). An interesting feature of these languages is that they show a great deal of influence from their early Austronesian neighbors. As detailed in the grammar, Mali has characteristics of both the Western Oceanic branch of Austronesian and Trans New Guinea. This is the first comprehensive grammar for a language from the family and provides a framework for further comparative and descriptive research in the region. The grammar was produced in cooperation with members of the Mali (Baining) community and is being published alongside a dictionary and text collection (also available from Pacific Linguistics). Includes bibliographical references (p. 407-410) and index Grammatik Sprache Baining language Grammar Baining (Papua New Guinean people) Languages Australian Australian National University Pacific Linguistics Sonstige oth Pacific linguistics 623 (DE-604)BV013899618 623 HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027540976&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Stebbins, Tonya N. Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea Pacific linguistics Grammatik Sprache Baining language Grammar Baining (Papua New Guinean people) Languages |
title | Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea |
title_auth | Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea |
title_exact_search | Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea |
title_full | Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea Tonya N. Stebbins |
title_fullStr | Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea Tonya N. Stebbins |
title_full_unstemmed | Mali (Baining) grammar a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea Tonya N. Stebbins |
title_short | Mali (Baining) grammar |
title_sort | mali baining grammar a language of the east new britain province papua new guinea |
title_sub | a language of the East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea |
topic | Grammatik Sprache Baining language Grammar Baining (Papua New Guinean people) Languages |
topic_facet | Grammatik Sprache Baining language Grammar Baining (Papua New Guinean people) Languages |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027540976&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV013899618 |
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