The ontology of roots and the emergence of nouns and verbs in Kuikuro
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Bruna Franchetto
Abstract
Kuikuro, a dialect of the Upper Xingu Carib Language (Southern Amazonia, Brazil), cannot be defined as polycategorial. Instead, we argue that it is a highly agglutinative language in which the postulates of Distributed Morphology are extremely effective for their descriptive and explanatory power: roots are acategorized lexical items from which families of words can be generated in syntax, and not before, through pairing with functional morphemes. Inflection, both nominal and verbal, is the phonological expression of syntactic identities and functions, e.g., Nouns and Verbs as arguments and their heads. A first excursion into the speech production of Kuikuro children aged 14 to 36 months brings new evidence in favor of the hypothesis that Nouns and Verbs emerge step by step in the development of syntactic functional projections, from an early phase of multi-functional and uninflected baby-words – a phenomenon at the heart of the ethnotheory of language acquisition.
Abstract
Kuikuro, a dialect of the Upper Xingu Carib Language (Southern Amazonia, Brazil), cannot be defined as polycategorial. Instead, we argue that it is a highly agglutinative language in which the postulates of Distributed Morphology are extremely effective for their descriptive and explanatory power: roots are acategorized lexical items from which families of words can be generated in syntax, and not before, through pairing with functional morphemes. Inflection, both nominal and verbal, is the phonological expression of syntactic identities and functions, e.g., Nouns and Verbs as arguments and their heads. A first excursion into the speech production of Kuikuro children aged 14 to 36 months brings new evidence in favor of the hypothesis that Nouns and Verbs emerge step by step in the development of syntactic functional projections, from an early phase of multi-functional and uninflected baby-words – a phenomenon at the heart of the ethnotheory of language acquisition.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- List of contributors xi
- Lexical Polycategoriality: Cross-linguistic, cross-theoretical and language acquisition approaches 1
-
Part I. Polycategoriality
- The flexibility of the noun/verb distinction in the lexicon of Mandinka 35
- Derivationally based homophony in French 59
- Categorial flexibility as an emergent phenomenon 79
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Part II. Polycategoriality across Amerindian languages
- Polycategoriality and hybridity across Mayan languages 101
- Polycategoriality and zero derivation 155
- What determines constraints on the relationships between roots and lexical categories? 175
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Part III. Polycategoriality across Austronesian and Australian languages
- Lexical and syntactic categories in Nêlêmwa (New Caledonia) and some other Austronesian languages 207
- Two classes of verbs in Northern Australian languages 243
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Part IV. Linguistic analysis in the light of acquisition data
- The ontology of roots and the emergence of nouns and verbs in Kuikuro 275
- Flexibles and polyvalence in Ku Waru 307
- Word class distinctiveness versus polycategoriality in Modern Hebrew 343
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Part V. Lexical categories and polycategoriality in acquisition
- Noun and Verb categories in acquisition 381
- Semantic discrimination of Noun/Verb categories in French children aged 1;6 to 2;11 413
- The acquisition of action nouns in Yucatec Maya 443
- Author index 467
- Language index 473
- Subject index 475
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- List of contributors xi
- Lexical Polycategoriality: Cross-linguistic, cross-theoretical and language acquisition approaches 1
-
Part I. Polycategoriality
- The flexibility of the noun/verb distinction in the lexicon of Mandinka 35
- Derivationally based homophony in French 59
- Categorial flexibility as an emergent phenomenon 79
-
Part II. Polycategoriality across Amerindian languages
- Polycategoriality and hybridity across Mayan languages 101
- Polycategoriality and zero derivation 155
- What determines constraints on the relationships between roots and lexical categories? 175
-
Part III. Polycategoriality across Austronesian and Australian languages
- Lexical and syntactic categories in Nêlêmwa (New Caledonia) and some other Austronesian languages 207
- Two classes of verbs in Northern Australian languages 243
-
Part IV. Linguistic analysis in the light of acquisition data
- The ontology of roots and the emergence of nouns and verbs in Kuikuro 275
- Flexibles and polyvalence in Ku Waru 307
- Word class distinctiveness versus polycategoriality in Modern Hebrew 343
-
Part V. Lexical categories and polycategoriality in acquisition
- Noun and Verb categories in acquisition 381
- Semantic discrimination of Noun/Verb categories in French children aged 1;6 to 2;11 413
- The acquisition of action nouns in Yucatec Maya 443
- Author index 467
- Language index 473
- Subject index 475