A Grammar of Tariana
 |
Browse |
 |
|
|
by Alexandra Y. Aikenvald
Cambridge University Press
Due/Published
November 2003, 30 pages,
cloth
ISBN
0521826640
This is a comprehensive reference grammar of Tariana, an endangered Arawak language from a remote region in the northwest Amazonian jungle. Its speakers traditionally marry someone speaking a different language, and as a result most people are fluent in five or six languages. Because of this rampant multilingualism, Tariana combines a number of features inherited from the protolanguage with properties diffused from neighbouring but unrelated Tucanoan languages. Typologically unusual features of the language include: an array of classifiers independent of genders, complex serial verbs, case marking depending on the topicality of a noun, and double marking of case and of number. Tariana has obligatory evidentiality: every sentence contains a special element indicating whether the information was seen, heard, or inferred by the speaker, or whether the speaker acquired it from somebody else. 58 tables 1 map Contents 1. The language and its speakers 2. Phonology 3. Word classes 4. Nominal morphology and noun structure 5. Noun classes and classifiers 6. Possession 7. Case marking and grammatical relations 8. Number 9. Further nominal categories 10. Derivation and compounding 11. Closed word classes 12. Verb classes and predicate structure 13. Valency changing and argument rearranging mechanisms 14. Tense and evidentiality 15. Aspect, Aktionsart and degree 16. Mood and modality 17. Negation 18. Serial verb constructions and verb compounding 19. Complex predicates 20. Participles and nominalisations 21. Clause types and other syntactic issues 22. Subordinate clauses and clause linking 23. Relative clauses 24. Complement clauses 25. Discourse organisation 26. Issues in etymology and semantics Appendix: The main features of the Tariana dialects Texts Vocabulary References Index |