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Afroasiatic: data and perspectives / edited by Mauro Tosco, University of Turin. — 1 online resource. — (Current issues in linguistic theory). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1685576.pdf>.Дата создания записи: 17.10.2017 Тематика: Afroasiatic languages.; Afroasiatic languages.; FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Arabic Коллекции: EBSCO Разрешенные действия: –
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Оглавление
- AFROASIATIC
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Afroasiatic: Fresh insights from an “old” language family
- References
- Part i. Afroasiatic: Classification and typology
- Did Proto-Afroasiatic have marked nominative or nominative-accusative alignment?
- 1. Cases in Berber and Cushitic
- 2. The nominative-absolutive alignment, or marked nominative system
- 3. The personal pronoun in languages with nominative-absolutive alignment
- 4. The personal pronoun in Afroasiatic: Egyptian, Cushitic
- 5. The personal pronoun in Berber
- 6. Chadic: the personal pronouns in Hausa
- 7. Originally only two paradigms of the personal pronoun?
- 8. Correlation of noun cases and pronoun paradigms
- References
- The limits and potentials of cladistics in Semitic
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodologies, techniques
- 2.1 Methodologies
- 2.2 Data characteristics
- 2.3 Software used
- 2.4 Languages represented in the graphs
- 3. Projections of data to the models
- 3.1 Constructing phylogenetic trees
- 3.2 The NeighborNet networks
- 4. Discussion
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Lexicostatistical evidence for Ethiosemitic, its subgroups, and borrowing
- 1. Subclassification of ES languages
- 2. A 250-word list as evidence for subclassification
- 3. Percentages of shared cognates in a 98-word list
- 4. Rate of error in counting cognates
- 5. Numbers of shared cognates in the 250-word list
- 6. Lexical evidence in the ES family tree
- 7. Number of lexemes unique to ES and its subgroups
- 8. ES cognates with proto-languages
- References
- Part ii. Forms and functions
- Reconsidering the ‘perfect’–‘imperfect’ opposition in the Classical Arabic verbal system
- 1. Introduction
- 2. A brief account of the ‘perfect’–‘imperfect’ opposition in the literature
- 3. Methodological problems
- 4. Reconsidering the faʿala–yafʿalu opposition in Classical Arabic
- 4.1 Syntactic environment
- 4.2 Compatibility with particles
- 4.3 Clause types (‘word-order’)
- 4.4 Lexical classes
- 4.5 Textual domains
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Primary sources
- Secondary sources
- The imperfective in Berber: Evidence of innovated forms and functions
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Berber verbal system
- 3. The negative imperfective in Berber
- 4. Innovations in the Berber verbal system
- 4.1 Innovations in the Tuareg verb
- 4.2 Innovations in the Tarifit verb
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Condition, interrogation and exception: Remarks on particles in Berber
- 1. ad in Zenaga
- 2. is in Tamazight and Tashlhit
- 3. m(a) in the northern varieties
- 3.1 The polyfunctional ma
- 3.2 m(a) derivatives
- 4. Variants to the element k(a)
- 5. kan in the eastern varieties
- 6. kud and its variants in the southern central area
- 7. Conclusion
- Specific abbreviations
- References
- Appendix
- The semantics of modals in Kordofanian Baggara Arabic
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The classification of Kordofanian Baggara Arabic
- 3. Tense, aspect and mood in KBA
- 4. The forms and the semantics of modals in KBA
- 4.1 gídir, b=i-gdar “can, be able”
- 4.2 dāyir “want, need”
- 4.3 mimkin, imkin “it’s possible”
- 4.4 ille “except”
- 4.5 lāzim “it’s necessary”
- 4.6 la buddi “inevitably”
- 4.7 axēr lē “had better, ought to”
- 4.8 min la buddi “it’s likely”
- 4.9 bukūn (epistemic) “must”
- 5. Conclusions
- List of symbols and glosses
- References
- Part iii. Predication and beyond
- Insubordination in Modern South Arabian: A common isogloss with Ethiosemitic?
- References
- Possessive and genitive constructions in Dahālik (Ethiosemitic)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Possessive and genitive constructions
- 2.1 Synthetic construction
- 2.2 Analytic construction
- 3. Conclusion
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- References
- The characterization of conditional patterns in Old Babylonian Akkadian
- 1. Preliminaria
- 1.1 General background
- 1.2 The domains
- 1.3 Literature review
- 1.4 Terminology
- 2. Parameters
- 2.1 Preceding polar directive: polar lexical resumption
- 2.2 Negative polarity items: (otherwise) negative expressions and arḫiš ul
- 2.3 Special semantics: the temporal frame of ul iprus
- 2.4 Diverging from modal congruence
- 2.5 The pattern: forms and structure
- 2.6 The respective function of the forms inside the pattern
- 2.7 Summary
- 3. Distinction from other analogous patterns
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- 1. Preliminaria
- Locative predication in Chadic: Implications for linguistic theory
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 The aim and scope of the study
- 2. State of the art with respect to locatives in Chadic
- 3. The terms
- 4. The hypotheses
- 5. Synchronic and diachronic methodology required for locative predication
- 6. Complementarity of lexical and grammatical means in locative predication in Mina
- 6.1 The system
- 6.2 Inherently locative predicate and inherently locative complement: coding through juxtaposition
- 6.3 Locative predicate and non-locative complement: Predicate n Noun
- 6.4 Non-locative predicate and locative complement: Predicate á Noun
- 6.5 Non-locative predicate and non-locative complement: Predicate á n Noun
- 7. Locative predication in Hausa
- 8. Locative predication in Pero
- 9. Mupun (West Chadic)
- 9.1 Predicator a in Mupun
- 9.2 The directional predicator n
- 10. Lele (East Chadic): coding locative predication by serial verb constructions
- 10.1 The interest of the situation in Lele
- 10.2 Inherently locative predicates and inherently locative complements
- 10.3 Coding the locative complement through postposition
- 10.4 Animate locatives
- 10.5 Summary of the coding of locative predication in Lele
- 11. Hdi: Locative predication through locative prepositions
- 11.1 Prepositions dá and dà
- 11.2 Stative locative predication in Hdi
- 11.3 Summary of the locative coding in Hdi
- 12. Locative predication in East Dangla
- 12.1 Summary of the locative predication in East Dangla
- 13. Summary of the evidence for the locative predication
- 14. Further evolution of locative predication
- 14.1 The nature of the changes
- 14.2 Gidar (Central Chadic)
- 14.3 A summary of the locative predication in Gidar
- 15. Conclusions and implications
- Abbreviations
- References
- 1. Introduction
- Unipartite clauses: A view from spoken Israeli Hebrew
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Prosody, discourse and syntax
- 3. What is a unipartite clause?
- 4. Classification of unipartite clauses
- 4.1 Anchored
- 4.2 Unanchored
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- The Interaction of state, prosody and linear order in Kabyle (Berber): Grammatical relations and information structure
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 General information about Kabyle
- 1.2 Relevant coding means
- 2. Information structure
- 2.1 Function of [Vsbj (NABS)]
- 2.2 Function of [Vsbj NPann (NPabs)]
- 2.3 Function of [NABS Vsbj (N)]
- 2.4 Function of NABS [Vsbj (N) (N)]
- 2.5 Function of [Vsbj (N) (N)] NANN
- 2.6 Synthesis on information structure
- 3. Grammatical relations
- 3.1 Grammatical relations are not marked unambiguously by one coding means
- 3.2 The interaction of state, position, prosodic grouping, and gender-number marking
- 3.4 Implications
- 4. General conclusion
- References
- 1. Introduction
- Index
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