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8. Associated eating and movement: further examination of Yuwaalaraay Gamilaraay verb suffixes
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John Giacon
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Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Contributors' addresses vii
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Genetic relatedness
- 1. Western Torres Strait language classification and development 15
- 2. The classification of Pinikura, Western Australia 31
- 3. Bound pronominals in the West Papuan languages 43
- 4. Alawa and its neighbours: Enigma variations 1 and 2 59
- 5. Reconstructing pre-Warumungu pronominals 71
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Part II. Reconstruction
- 6. Splitting vs. lumping in morphological analysis: Evidence from Greek 91
- 7. Pronominal accretions in Pama-Nyungan 99
- 8. Associated eating and movement: further examination of Yuwaalaraay Gamilaraay verb suffixes 107
- 9. The origin of conjugation markers in Australian languages 123
- 10. Some remarks on negatives in Southeastern Australia 139
- 11. *gṷes-, *(z)g ṷes-, *(s)g ṷesh2-? The PIE root for 'extinguish/go out' 155
- 12. The language of Central Australian Aboriginal songs 167
- 13. The origin of noun classes in Worrorran languages 185
- 14. Hittite duwān (parā) 201
- 15. Morphological reconstruction and Australian languages 211
- 16. Warlpiri verb roots in comparative perspective 221
- 17. Oujiang Wu tones and acoustic reconstruction 235
- 18. Issues in the morphological reconstruction of Proto-Mon-Khmer 251
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Part III. Processes of change
- 19. Case selection Old and New Basque 269
- 20. Third person plural as a morphological zero: Object marking in Marovo 281
- 21. The morphological development of the perfect in Jersey Norman French 299
- 22. Grand-daddy morphs: The importance of suffixes in reconstructing Pama-Nyungan kinship 313
- 23. Morphology of the eggs, and what it can tell us about Romanian nominal inflection 329
- 24. The refunctionalisation of first person plural inflection in Tiwi 341
- 25. A chain vowel raising in the early history of Chinese 349
- Index of languages 355
- Index of subjects 361
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Contributors' addresses vii
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Genetic relatedness
- 1. Western Torres Strait language classification and development 15
- 2. The classification of Pinikura, Western Australia 31
- 3. Bound pronominals in the West Papuan languages 43
- 4. Alawa and its neighbours: Enigma variations 1 and 2 59
- 5. Reconstructing pre-Warumungu pronominals 71
-
Part II. Reconstruction
- 6. Splitting vs. lumping in morphological analysis: Evidence from Greek 91
- 7. Pronominal accretions in Pama-Nyungan 99
- 8. Associated eating and movement: further examination of Yuwaalaraay Gamilaraay verb suffixes 107
- 9. The origin of conjugation markers in Australian languages 123
- 10. Some remarks on negatives in Southeastern Australia 139
- 11. *gṷes-, *(z)g ṷes-, *(s)g ṷesh2-? The PIE root for 'extinguish/go out' 155
- 12. The language of Central Australian Aboriginal songs 167
- 13. The origin of noun classes in Worrorran languages 185
- 14. Hittite duwān (parā) 201
- 15. Morphological reconstruction and Australian languages 211
- 16. Warlpiri verb roots in comparative perspective 221
- 17. Oujiang Wu tones and acoustic reconstruction 235
- 18. Issues in the morphological reconstruction of Proto-Mon-Khmer 251
-
Part III. Processes of change
- 19. Case selection Old and New Basque 269
- 20. Third person plural as a morphological zero: Object marking in Marovo 281
- 21. The morphological development of the perfect in Jersey Norman French 299
- 22. Grand-daddy morphs: The importance of suffixes in reconstructing Pama-Nyungan kinship 313
- 23. Morphology of the eggs, and what it can tell us about Romanian nominal inflection 329
- 24. The refunctionalisation of first person plural inflection in Tiwi 341
- 25. A chain vowel raising in the early history of Chinese 349
- Index of languages 355
- Index of subjects 361