Phonology - Segmental |
Pre-/post-nasalized stops |
Analysis posits that the stop is the most relevant underlying phoneme. Comment in notes on whether the nasal contour is understood as a phonetic (allophonic) effect, or is phonologically contrastive. |
no |
|
Margery 1982:34, 38 |
|
|
|
Phonology - Segmental |
Glottalized/ejective consonants |
Phonemic contrast [NOT counting glottal stop/fricative] |
no |
|
Margery 1982:34 |
|
|
|
Phonology - Segmental |
Palatalized stops |
Phonemic contrast |
no |
|
Margery 1982:34 |
|
|
|
Phonology - Segmental |
Phonemic vowel length |
Does the language have long and short vowels? |
no |
|
Margery 1982:34-5 |
|
|
|
Phonology - Segmental |
Phonemic glottalization/laryngealization of vowels |
|
no |
|
Margery 1982:34-5 |
|
|
|
Phonology - Segmental |
Complex onsets |
Onset consists of more than one consonant phoneme |
no info |
|
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Phonology - Segmental |
No codas |
*(C)VC [no also equals highly constrained] |
no info |
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Phonology - Segmental |
Word-final coda required |
Do all syllables end in a consonant? |
no info |
|
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Phonology - Suprasegmental |
Contrastive tones |
Note how many contrastive tones |
yes |
two tones:low and high |
Margery 1982:37-8 |
|
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|
Phonology - Suprasegmental |
Contrastive stress |
Does stress occur on different syllables with meaning difference? |
no info |
|
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Phonology - Suprasegmental |
Nasalization property of morpheme or syllable |
In contrast to nasalization as a property of segments |
no info |
|
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Phonology - Suprasegmental |
Nasal spreading across some morpheme boundaries |
Do some affixes or other morphemes take the nasal/oral properties of the root they attach to? |
no info |
|
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|
Phonology - Suprasegmental |
Vowel harmony |
|
no info |
|
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|
Morphology - General |
Verbal fusion (2+ categories marked by portmanteau morphemes on verb) |
Verb combines two or more categories (tense, aspect, mood, person, number, etc.) in portmanteau morphemes{ [ignore proclitics unless they are fused with values other than person/number] |
no info |
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Morphology - General |
Inflection manifested by replacement of segmental or suprasegmental phonemes |
Stem change, tone |
no info |
|
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|
Morphology - General |
Verbal synthesis (1+ inflectional categories marked by verbal affixes) |
Morphological complexity in verbs - multiple inflectional affixes in a single verb word |
no info |
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|
Morphology - General |
Prefixing/suffixing inflectional morph: strongly prefixing |
There are many more prefixes than suffixes |
no info |
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Morphology - General |
Prefixing/suffixing inflectional morph: strongly suffixing |
There are many more suffixes than prefixes |
no info |
|
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|
Morphology - General |
Prefixing/suffixing inflectional morph: roughly equal or one weakly preferred |
The numbers of suffixes and prefixes are not notably different |
no info |
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Morphology - General |
Reduplication: full |
The full morpheme is reduplicated |
no info |
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Morphology - General |
Reduplication: partial |
Only part of the morpheme is reduplicated |
no info |
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Morphology - Compounding, auxiliaries, light verbs |
Productive NN compounding |
Noun compounds created from two noun phrases are common and systematically produced |
no info |
|
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Morphology - Compounding, auxiliaries, light verbs |
Productive VV serialization (without compounding) |
Verb roots can be combined in a single predicate without markers of subordination (distinct from subordinating construction) or distinct inflection |
no info |
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Morphology - Compounding, auxiliaries, light verbs |
Productive VV compounding |
Serial verb constructions involve chaining of roots together in one morphophonological word |
no info |
|
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|
Morphology - Compounding, auxiliaries, light verbs |
Verb-adjunct (aka light verb) constructions |
There is a set of semantically weak verbs used in complex verbal constructions, e.g. 'take a nap' |
no info |
|
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Morphology - Compounding, auxiliaries, light verbs |
Auxiliary verb(s) |
There are verbs that accompany main verbs of clauses and take grammatical marking not expressed by main verbs |
no info |
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Morphology - Incorporation |
Incorporation of nouns into verbs is a productive intransitivizing process |
Verb contains nominal segment |
no info |
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Morphology - Incorporation |
Productive incorporation of other elements (adjectives, locatives, etc.) into verbs |
Like noun incorporation, but incorporated elements are not nouns |
no info |
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Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Noun classes/genders |
Nouns are organized into sets with distinct morphological treatment; usually affects all nouns and involves agreement within the NP |
yes |
There exists 6 noun clases:humans, flat things, rounded things, elongated things, sets and trees. However, this noun classes are not completely consistent since, for instance, in the human class are also included some animals. |
Bertoglia 1983:5 |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Number of noun classes/genders |
Note the (approximate) total number of noun classes/genders |
6 |
|
Bertoglia 1983:5 |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Noun classifiers (distinct from noun classes/genders) |
Nouns are organized into sets, but only a limited set of nouns may be implicated, with no or limited agreement marking. If only numeral classifiers exist, indicate yes but explain. |
no info |
|
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Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Sex is a relevant category in noun class(ification) system for animates |
Masculine, feminine, neuter |
no |
|
Bertoglia 1983:3-13 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Sex is a relevant category in noun class(ification) system for inanimates |
|
no |
|
Bertoglia 1983:3-13 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Animacy (w/o reference to sex) is a relevant category in the noun class(ification) system |
Animate/inanimate, human/non-human |
no |
|
Bertoglia 1983:3-13 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Sex/gender distinction only in 3rd person pronouns |
add in notes section whether gender is present in other PNs or not in any PNs; consider with reference to pronouns and person marking only |
no |
|
Bourland 1976:56 |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Shape is a relevant category in the noun class(ification) system for animates |
|
yes |
|
Bertoglia 1983:3-13 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Shape is a relevant category in the noun class(ification) system for inanimates |
|
yes |
|
Bertoglia 1983:3-13 |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
"Repeater" classifiers |
Where no distinct classifier exists, a copy of the noun itself may function in the morphosyntactic classifier "slot" |
no info |
|
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Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Numeral classifiers (specific to numerals) |
Special classifier forms that occur only with numerals |
no info |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Gender and noun classification |
Classifiers used as derivational suffixes to derive nouns |
Verb + classifier = 'thing for doing V, thing that does V, etc.' |
no info |
|
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Nominal Categories - Number |
Singular number may be marked on the noun |
Often occurs in a small subset of nouns if a single entity is referred to, e.g. insects that normally occur in groups |
no |
|
Bourland 1976:54 |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Number |
Plural affix on noun |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:54 |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Number |
Plural marked by stem change or tone on noun |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:54 |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Number |
Plural marked by reduplication of noun |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:54 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Number |
Plural word/clitic |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:54 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Number |
Plural marked on human or animate nouns only |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:54 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Number |
Pronominal plural: stem + nominal plural affix |
Pronouns use a nominal plural affix not specific to pronouns |
no |
|
Bourland 1976:54-56 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Number |
Unique associative plural marker |
e.g. 'John and his associates', 'John and them' |
no info |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Definiteness and clusivity |
Definite or specific articles |
Definite = particular referent known to both speaker and addressee; specific = particular referent known to speaker only |
no |
|
Bourland 1976:53-54 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Definiteness and clusivity |
Marker of definiteness distinct from demonstratives |
Focus on articles/markers whose primary function is to mark definiteness |
no info |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Definiteness and clusivity |
Indefinite or non-specific article |
or marker |
no info |
|
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|
|
Nominal Categories - Definiteness and clusivity |
Inclusive/exclusive: in free pronominals |
Inclusive =us + you, exclusive = us but not you |
yes |
|
Bourland 1976:56 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Definiteness and clusivity |
Inclusive/exclusive: in verbal inflection (bound) |
|
no info |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Definiteness and clusivity |
Distance contrasts in demonstratives (number) |
Note the number of distances in the demonstrative system |
no info |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Definiteness and clusivity |
Other contrasts in demonstratives (visibility, elevation, etc.) |
|
no info |
|
|
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|
|
Nominal Categories - Pronominal categories |
Gender in 3sg pronouns |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:56 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Pronominal categories |
Gender in 3pl pronouns |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:56 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Pronominal categories |
Gender in 1st and/or 2nd person pronouns |
|
no |
|
Bourland 1976:56 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Pronominal categories |
Formal/informal distinction in pronouns |
Polite pronominal variants or differential avoidance of pronouns |
no |
|
Bourland 1976:56 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Pronominal categories |
Reflexive pronouns |
e.g. English 'himself', Spanish 'se'; distinct form(s) from basic (non-reflexive) pronominals; distinct from reflexive verbal affix |
no info |
|
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Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Adpositions mark core NPs |
Prepositions or postpositions mark subjects, objects, beneficiaries/recipients |
no info |
|
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|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: number of cases |
Note the number of grammatical relations that may be morphologically marked on the noun |
5 |
There are five case which are morphologically marked. These cases do not include nominative and accusa which are not morphologically marked. |
Bourland 1976:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: only non-core arguments morphologically marked |
Subjects, objects, beneficiaries/recipients NOT marked, but other grammatical relations are |
yes |
Dative is marked morphologically in contrast to nominative and accusative cases which are not. Other non-core cases are morphologicalli marked. |
Bourland 1976:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: symmetrical |
All NPs marked if in appropriate syntactic relation; no distinction in marking based on semantics (type of entity) |
no info |
|
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|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: asymmetrical |
Semantically defined subset of NPs marked for case, e.g. animates |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: suffix or postpositional clitic |
|
yes |
|
Bourland 19865:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: prefix or prepositional clitic |
|
no |
|
Bourland 19865:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: infix or inpositional clitic |
|
no |
|
Bourland 19865:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: stem change |
|
no |
|
Bourland 19865:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: tone |
|
no |
|
Bourland 19865:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Case and adpositions |
Case: comitative = instrumental |
Same marking for 'with a person' and 'with an instrument' |
no |
|
Bourland 19865:85 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Numerals |
Base-2 |
At least some part of the system involves base-2 |
no |
|
Bertoglia 1983:4-5 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Numerals |
Base-5 |
At least some part of the system involves base-5 |
yes |
|
Bertoglia 1983:4-5 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Numerals |
Base-10 |
At least some part of the system involves base-10 |
yes |
|
Bertoglia 1983:4-5 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Numerals |
Other base (specify) |
4, 20, etc. |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Numerals |
Etymological transparency in any numerals under 5 |
e.g. two = 'eye-quantity' |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Numerals |
Numerals do not go above 5 |
'Many' or some other non-exact term used |
no |
|
Bertoglia 1983:4-5 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Numerals |
Numerals do not go above 10 |
'Many' or some other non-exact term used |
yes |
|
Bertoglia 1983:4-5 |
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Other nominal |
Tense or aspect inflection on non-verbal predicates |
i.e. nominal or adjectival |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Categories - Other nominal |
Person inflection on non-verbal predicates |
i.e. nominal or adjectival |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession |
Pronominal possessive affixes: prefix on N |
alienable/inalienable? |
no |
|
Bourland 1976:57 |
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession |
Pronominal possessive affixes: suffix on N |
alienable/inalienable? |
yes |
|
Bourland 1976:57 |
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession |
Head/dependent marking in possessive NP: dependent |
e.g. 'the boy-'s dog' |
yes |
|
Bourland 1976:57 |
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession |
Head/dependent marking in possessive NP: head |
e.g. 'the boy his-dog' |
no |
|
Bourland 1976:57 |
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession |
Possessive classifiers |
There are special classifiers that occur with possessed entities |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession - Alienability |
Morphological marking of inalienable possession |
Where inalienable possession differs from alienable, the former takes a morphological marker (may include an associated free particle/pronoun) |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession - Alienability |
Morphological marking of alienable possession |
Where inalienable possession differs from alienable, the latter takes a morphological marker (may include an associated free particle/pronoun) |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession - Alienability |
Default marker for inalienably possessed nouns if unpossessed |
An inalienable noun that is in an unpossessed state must have a derivational affix or associated form |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession - Alienability |
Inalienable possession of kin terms |
'my-father' but *father |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession - Alienability |
Inalienable possession of body parts (human/animal) |
'my-leg' but *leg |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Possession - Alienability |
Generic human nouns are obligatorily bound/possessed |
Human nouns must co-occur with another noun (e.g. Hup-man, NonIndian-woman, but *man) |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Adjectives |
Underived adjectives |
There are underived adjectives which do not have counterparts in other word classes |
yes |
|
Bourland 1976:55 |
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Adjectives |
Gender inflection on adjectives within the NP |
There is gender agreement/concord (animate/inanimate or masc/fem, etc.) within the NP, e.g. la casa blanca, el perro blanco |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Derivation |
Productive nominalizing morphology: action/state (arrive/arrival) |
There is a morpheme which derives an event from a verb |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Derivation |
Productive nominalizing morphology: agentive (sing/singer) |
There is a morpheme which derives an agent or subject from a verb |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Derivation |
Productive nominalizing morphology: object (sing/song) |
There is a morpheme which derives a patient or object from a verb |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Derivation |
Productive verbalizing morphology |
There is a morpheme which derives a verb from a noun or adjective |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Nominal Syntax - Other |
NP coordination and comitative phrases marked differently |
'John and Mary went to market' is marked differently from 'John went to market with Mary' |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Dedicated past marker(s) |
Past tense is regularly morphologically marked on the verb or elsewhere |
yes |
These are verbal suffixes which also trigger an change in the tematic verbal vowel |
Margery 1985:106-15 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Multiple past tenses, distinguishing distance from time of reference |
e.g. distant vs. recent past |
yes |
There are two past tenses: past tense which reffers to previous events in the same day and past tense which refferes to events further back in the past than the present day. |
Margery 1985:106-15 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Multiple future tenses, distinguishing distance from time of reference |
e.g. imminent vs. distant future |
no |
Apart from the morphological future tense, there is a preiprhastic future tense (Margery 1985:123-4) |
Margery 1985:116-7 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Dedicated future or non-past marker(s) |
|
yes |
|
Margery 1985:116-7 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Tense-aspect affixes: prefix |
|
no |
|
Margery 1985:106-17 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Tense-aspect affixes: suffix |
|
yes |
|
Margery 1985:106-17 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Tense-aspect affixes: tone or ablaut |
|
no |
However, there are is tense suffix which has high tone but tone by itself does not mark tense |
Margery 1985:106-17 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Aspect and tense |
Tense-aspect suppletion |
|
yes |
It only occurs with few verbs |
Margery 1985:106-17 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Dedicated imperative morpheme or verb form |
There is a special morpheme (or morphemes, or a bare verb root where inflection is normally expected) used to signal imperative (command) mood |
yes |
There are some other strategies to convey imperative meaning among which the use of the infinitive form seems to be the most common (Margery 1985:128-32). |
Bourland 1976:65 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Polite imperative morpheme |
There is a distinct morpheme for polite imperative constructions (specify if it has other functions in the language) |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Difference between negation in imperative (prohibitive) and declarative clauses |
There are different strategies for marking negation in imperative and declarative clauses |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Dedicated hortative morpheme or verb form (1pl or 3rd person imperative) |
as opposed to imperative; the person in control of desired state of affairs is not the addressee; ex: 'Let's sing' / 'Let him sing' |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Situational possibility: affix on verb |
Inflectional marking of capacity to do something |
yes |
|
Margery 1985:132 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Situational possibility: verbal construction |
|
no |
|
Margery 1985:132-3 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Situational possibility: other marking |
|
yes |
Using the same sufix {-mĩ} in other morphosyntactic environments |
Margery 1985:132-3 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Epistemic possibility: affix on verb |
Modal expressing hypothesis |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Epistemic possibility: verbal construction |
|
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Epistemic possibility: other marking |
|
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Marking of expected/unexpected action or result |
There is inflectional marking of expected/unexpected |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Verbal frustrative |
Modal expressing frustration ("in vain") |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Verbal habitual |
Modal expressing habituality |
no |
a verbal suffix is used to mark habituality |
Margery 1985:117; Bourland 1976:59 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Apprehensive construction |
There is a single morpheme or verb form to mean '(be careful lest) X happens' |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Reality status marking on verbs |
There are dedicated morpheme(s) for realis/irrealis 'actualized/unactualized events' |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Mood |
Affect markers (positive/negative) |
Note whether these inflectional markers are positive or negative |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Directionals |
Directional elements affixed to the verb |
There are grammaticalized elements indicating movement away, toward, there and back, etc. |
yes |
There are around five of these suffixes |
Margery 1985:104 |
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Grammaticalized visual |
Indicates information has been witnessed visually - indicate only if an overt marker |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Grammaticalized nonvisual |
Indicates information has been sensed firsthand but not visually (usually heard; also smelled, tasted, felt) |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Grammaticalized inferential |
Indicates information has not been experienced firsthand, but inferred from some kind of evidence - indicate only if an overt marker. |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Grammaticalized reportive |
Indicates speaker is not responsible for veracity of statement, merely reporting; 'allegedly' |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Grammaticalized quotative |
Indicate presence of adjacent representation of repeated discourse |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Other evidential |
Any other evidential values not represented above |
no info |
|
|
|
|
|
Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Evidentiality: verb affix or clitic |
|
no info |
|
|
|
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Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Evidentiality: part of tense system |
Includes portmanteau morphs |
no info |
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Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Evidentiality: separate particle |
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no info |
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Verbal Categories - Evidentiality |
Evidentiality: modal morpheme |
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no info |
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Verbal Categories - Verbal number |
Verbal number suppletion |
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no info |
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Verbal Categories - Other |
Social interaction markers |
Note the type of interaction |
no info |
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Word Order |
No fixed basic constituent order |
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no info |
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Word Order |
VS in intransitive clauses |
Verb precedes subject |
no info |
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Word Order |
VS in transitive clauses |
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no |
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Margery 1985:102 |
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Word Order |
VO in transitive clauses |
Verb precedes object |
no |
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Margery 1985:102 |
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Word Order |
OS in transitive clauses |
Object precedes subject |
no |
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Margery 1985:102 |
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Word Order |
Preposition-Noun |
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no info |
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Word Order |
Noun-Postposition or case suffix |
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no info |
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Word Order |
Gen-Noun |
Possessive phrase composed of a free possessor and its possessum has possessor first (e.g. John's book) |
no |
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Bourland 1976:57 |
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Word Order |
Noun-Gen |
Possessive phrase composed of a free possessor and its possessum has possessum first (e.g. 'book of John') |
yes |
but the possessor is not free since it has the genitive suffix /-tʃa/. |
Bourland 1976:57 |
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Word Order |
Adj-Noun |
Adjective precedes the noun |
no info |
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Word Order |
Noun-Adj |
Adjective follows the noun |
yes |
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Bourland 1976:55 |
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Word Order |
Dem-Noun |
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yes |
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Bourland 1976:53-54 |
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Word Order |
Noun-Dem |
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no |
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Bourland 1976:53-54 |
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Word Order |
Num-Noun |
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no info |
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Word Order |
Noun-Num |
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no info |
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Word Order |
Noun-Rel |
Relative clause follows noun that it modifies |
no info |
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Word Order |
Rel-Noun |
Relative clause precedes noun that it modifies |
no info |
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Word Order |
Re<Noun>l (internally headed relative) |
e.g. 'the dog cat chased-NMZR got away' ('the cat that the dog chased got away') |
no info |
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Word Order |
Relative clause is correlative or adjoined |
e.g. 'what is running, the dog chased that cat' |
no info |
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Word Order |
Question word is clause initial |
'what', 'who', etc. come first in interrogative clause |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking in full NPs: nominative-accusative w/ marked accusative |
Objects of transitive clauses ('P') have a unique marker, while subjects of transitive ('A') and intransitive ('S') clauses are unmarked or share a different marker from that occurring on objects |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking in full NPs: nominative-accusative w/ marked nominative |
Subjects of transitive and intransitive clauses share a marker, while objects of transitives are unmarked |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking in full NPs: ergative-absolutive |
Subjects of intransitive clauses and objects of transitives share a unique marker, while subjects of transitive clauses are unmarked or have a different marker |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking in full NPs: tripartite |
Intransitive subjects, transitive subjects, and transitive objects all receive distinct case markers |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking in full NPs: active-inactive |
Subjects of intransitive clauses are treated two different ways: like subjects of transitives if they are more agent-like (e.g. he jumped), and like objects of transitives if they are more patient-like (e.g. he fell asleep) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking of pronouns: marked accusative |
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no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking of pronouns: marked nominative |
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no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking of pronouns: ergative-absolutive |
yes, no, mixed, other |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking of pronouns: tripartite |
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no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of case marking of pronouns: active-inactive |
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no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of verbal person-marking: nominative-accusative |
Same as above, for pronominal affixes/clitics on verbs |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of verbal person-marking: ergative-absolutive |
yes, no, mixed, other |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of verbal person-marking: active-inactive |
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no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of verbal person-marking: hierarchical |
Marking of A and P depends on their relative ranking on a hierarchy (usually 1>2>3 or 2>1>3) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Alignment |
Alignment of verbal person-marking: split |
More than one of the above systems is represented in person marking, depending on e.g. person (e.g. 1/2 vs. 3), tense-aspect value, main vs. subordinate clause type, etc. |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Pronominal subjects: pronouns in subject position |
Pronominal subjects are free pronouns that occur in the same position as full NP subjects |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Pronominal subjects: prefixes on verb |
Pronominal subjects are marked as verbal prefixes (free pronouns may be another option) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Pronominal subjects: suffixes on verb |
Pronominal subjects are marked as verbal suffixes (free pronouns may be another option) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Pronominal subjects: clitics on variable host |
Pronominal subjects are clitics that can attach to verbs, nominal constituents, etc. |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Pronominal subjects: pronouns in non-subject position |
Pronominal subjects are free pronouns but do not normally occur in the position expected for full NP subjects |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Person marking on intransitive verbs |
Intransitive verbs take person-marking clitics/affixes |
no |
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Margery 1985:103 |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Person marking (of agents) on transitive verbs |
Transitive verbs take subject (A) markers |
no |
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Margery 1985:103 |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Person-marking (of objects) on transitive verbs |
Transitive verbs take object (P) markers |
no |
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Margery 1985:103 |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
3rd person zero in verbal person marking: subjects |
3rd person subjects are not overtly marked within the verbal person-marking system |
yes |
But notice that subject or objects are not cross marked on the verb |
Margery 1985:103 |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
3rd person zero in verbal person marking: objects |
3rd person objects are not overtly marked within the verbal person-marking system |
yes |
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Margery 1985:103 |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Number can be marked separately from person on the verb |
Verbal person marking exists, but number is (or can) be marked separately |
yes |
Only number is maked in the verb (person is not) |
Margery 1985:145-52 |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Possessive affixes/clitics on nouns are same as verbal person markers |
Where nouns take possessive affixes, these are the same as the person-marking affixes |
no |
Nouns take the genitive suffix /-tʃa/ |
Bourland 1976:57 |
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Simple Clauses - Pronouns and person marking |
Gender distinguished in verbal person markers |
For any person, verbal person markers exhibit different forms depending on the gender (masc/fem, animate/inanimate, etc.) of the referent |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice |
Ditransitive constructions: indirect object |
In ditransitives (e.g. 'John gives a book to Bill'), the theme (book) is treated in the same way as are objects of transitives, while the recipient/beneficiary (Bill) is treated differently |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice |
Ditransitive constructions: double object |
In ditransitives (e.g. 'John gives Bill a book'), both the theme (book) and the recipient/beneficiary (Bill) is treated in the same way as are objects of transitives |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice |
Ditransitive constructions: secondary object |
In ditransitives, the recipient/beneficiary is treated in the same way as are objects of transitives, while the theme (book) is treated differently |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Decreasing |
Reciprocal: dedicated morpheme |
Verb becomes reciprocal through use of reciprocal morpheme associated with the verb (may be attached to the verb root). This morpheme is only used to mean reciprocal. |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Decreasing |
Reflexive: dedicated morpheme |
Verb becomes reflexive through use of reflexive morpheme associated with the verb (may be attached to the verb root). This morpheme is used only to mean reflexive. |
yes |
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Bourland 1976:71-72 |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Decreasing |
Reciprocal/reflexive: same morpheme |
Verb becomes reciprocal or reflexive through use of a morpheme that means either reciprocal or reflexive which attaches to the root of the verb |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Decreasing |
Passive |
Passive voice usually involves a change to the verb, while the object of the active voice verb is promoted to subject in the passive voice, and the former subject is deleted/demoted |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Decreasing |
Antipassive |
Like passive, but deletes or demotes the object of a transitive verb; usually found in ergative languages |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Decreasing |
Other intransitivizing morphology |
There is/are some other mechanism(s) for reducing valency |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Applicative: benefactive |
Applicative adds a beneficiary/maleficiary object argument to the verb |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Applicative: other |
Applicative adds some other object argument to the verb |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Causative: prefix |
Causative is morphological and is attached before the root of the verb |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Causative: suffix |
Causative is morphological and is attached after the root of the verb |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Causative marked by circumfix, stem change, or tone |
Morphological causative other than simple prefix/suffix |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Causative: serial verb or analytical construction |
Causative construction that involves periphrasis or serialization |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Causative: dedicated 'make do by proxy' |
Indicates that the causer does not directly cause the action of the verb to be realized, but does so by inducing someone else to carry out the action, e.g. 'John had the house painted.' |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Causative: dedicated sociative |
Indicates that causer participates in event |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Valence and voice - Increasing |
Other transitivizing morphology (adds valence) |
There is/are some other mechanism(s) for increasing valency |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Clausal negator is a preposed element |
Clausal negator is a preposed element |
yes |
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Bourland 1976:85 |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Clausal negator is a postposed element |
Clausal negator is a postposed element |
no |
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Bourland 1976:85 |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Negatives: affix |
Negatives: affix |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Negatives: particle |
Negatives: particle |
yes |
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Bourland 1976:85 |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Negatives: auxiliary verb |
Negatives: auxiliary verb |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Negatives: double |
Standard (non-emphatic) negation typically requires two morphemes, e.g. French 'ne V pas' |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Distinct negative form for 'NP does not exist' |
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no info |
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Simple Clauses - Negation |
Distinct negative expression 'I don't know' |
Lexical expression or highly idiomatic phrase |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Interrogatives |
Polar questions: interrogative particle |
Yes/no questions distinguished from declaratives by interrogative particle |
yes |
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Bourland 1976:86 |
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Simple Clauses - Interrogatives |
Polar questions: verb morphology |
Yes/no questions distinguished from declaratives by interrogative verb morphology |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Interrogatives |
Polar questions: word order |
Yes/no questions distinguished from declaratives by word order (esp. subject-verb inversion) |
no |
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Bourland 1976:86 |
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Simple Clauses - Interrogatives |
Polar questions: intonation only |
Yes/no questions distinguished from declaratives by intonation only |
no |
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Bourland 1976:86 |
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Simple Clauses - Interrogatives |
Content questions: word order differs from declaratives |
Content questions distinguished from declaratives by word order (esp. subject-verb inversion) as well as by presence of Q-word (who, what, etc.) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Predicate adjectives: verbal |
Adjectives act like verbs in predicative position |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Predicate adjectives: nominal |
Adjectives act like nouns in predicative position |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Zero copula for predicate nominals is possible |
Predicate nominals may occur without a copula (i.e. grammatical in some circumstances, if not all) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Headless relative clauses |
Compare Eng 'the one that fell' (but in Eng 'one' could be considered a head) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Headless relative clauses are the dominant or only form of relative clause |
Relative clauses that form a constituent with a head noun (in a single noun phrase) are rare or nonexistent; some descriptions may refer to adjoined or correlative clauses. |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Relative clause may occur with a noun classifier/class marker |
It may be unclear whether the classifier is the nominal head of the construction or is an agreement marker on the relative clause |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Relativizer is a verbal affix |
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no info |
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Simple Clauses - Predication |
Morphological relativizer is homophonous with nominalizer |
The same morpheme marks a relative clause and is a nominalizer on verbs (and/or other word classes) |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Desiderative expressions |
Grammaticalized verbal desiderative |
Indicates that the subject desires to carry out the action denoted by the verb (distinct from verb 'want', but may be grammaticalized from it) |
no |
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Margery 1985:126-8 |
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Simple Clauses - Other |
Clause chaining |
Clauses can be grouped such that only one bears most of the verb morphology, and the others are marked as to whether they share a subject with this reference clause. |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Other |
Morphologically marked switch-reference system |
There are special markers to indicate same vs. different subject when two clauses are combined |
no info |
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Simple Clauses - Other |
Morphologically marked distinction between simultaneous and sequential clauses |
Morphology (usually on verb) distinguishes between clauses denoting events that occur at the same time or in sequence |
no info |
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