John Benjamins Publishing Company
Areal features of copula sentences in Karaim as spoken in Lithuania
Abstract
The paper deals with copula clauses in Karaim, a highly endangered Kipchak Turkic language spoken in Lithuania. Karaim has been dominated by the non-Turkic (Baltic and Slavic) languages of the area. Though Karaim has acquired many properties not typical of Turkic it has preserved its Turkic morphological inventory to the extent that typical Turkic categories are still marked by genuine Turkic formatives (Csató 2012, 2013). Notwithstanding this remarkable sustainability, the paper demonstrates how selective copying has in many cases changed morphosyntactic properties of the copula clauses. The contact-induced features are analyzed in the Code-Copying Model (Johanson 2002).
Abstract
The paper deals with copula clauses in Karaim, a highly endangered Kipchak Turkic language spoken in Lithuania. Karaim has been dominated by the non-Turkic (Baltic and Slavic) languages of the area. Though Karaim has acquired many properties not typical of Turkic it has preserved its Turkic morphological inventory to the extent that typical Turkic categories are still marked by genuine Turkic formatives (Csató 2012, 2013). Notwithstanding this remarkable sustainability, the paper demonstrates how selective copying has in many cases changed morphosyntactic properties of the copula clauses. The contact-induced features are analyzed in the Code-Copying Model (Johanson 2002).
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- List of contributors vii
- Preface ix
- Introduction xi
-
I. Verbal Categories and Processes in Categorizations
- The tense-aspect system of Khorchin Mongolian 3
- Locational and directional relations and tense and aspect marking in Chalkan, a South Siberian Turkic language 67
- Conspiring motivations for causative and passive isomorphism: 91
-
II. Syntactic Functions and Case-Marking
- Spatial semantics, case and relator nouns in Evenki 111
- A survey of alignment features in the Greater Hindukush with special references to Indo-Aryan 133
- Between predicative and attributive possession in Bashkir 175
-
III. Clause Combining and Discourse
- Areal features of copula sentences in Karaim as spoken in Lithuania 205
- Non-past copular markers in Turkish 221
- On the distribution of the contrastive-concessive discourse connectives ama ‘but/yet’ and fakat ‘but’ in written Turkish 251
- Anaphora in Ossetic correlatives and the typology of clause combining 275
- Kinds of evidentiality in German complement clauses 311
- Evidentiality in Dzungar Tuvan 339
-
IV. Historical Issues
- On the evolution of Russian subject reference 381
- The development of negation in the Transeurasian languages 401
- List of Index 421
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- List of contributors vii
- Preface ix
- Introduction xi
-
I. Verbal Categories and Processes in Categorizations
- The tense-aspect system of Khorchin Mongolian 3
- Locational and directional relations and tense and aspect marking in Chalkan, a South Siberian Turkic language 67
- Conspiring motivations for causative and passive isomorphism: 91
-
II. Syntactic Functions and Case-Marking
- Spatial semantics, case and relator nouns in Evenki 111
- A survey of alignment features in the Greater Hindukush with special references to Indo-Aryan 133
- Between predicative and attributive possession in Bashkir 175
-
III. Clause Combining and Discourse
- Areal features of copula sentences in Karaim as spoken in Lithuania 205
- Non-past copular markers in Turkish 221
- On the distribution of the contrastive-concessive discourse connectives ama ‘but/yet’ and fakat ‘but’ in written Turkish 251
- Anaphora in Ossetic correlatives and the typology of clause combining 275
- Kinds of evidentiality in German complement clauses 311
- Evidentiality in Dzungar Tuvan 339
-
IV. Historical Issues
- On the evolution of Russian subject reference 381
- The development of negation in the Transeurasian languages 401
- List of Index 421