Home General Interest Chapter 7. The diachrony of the perfect in Zapotec
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Chapter 7. The diachrony of the perfect in Zapotec

  • George Aaron Broadwell
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The Perfect Volume
This chapter is in the book The Perfect Volume

Abstract

Colonial Valley Zapotec (CVZ) is the form of Zapotec spoken in the Valley of Oaxaca during the Spanish colonial period (ca 1550–1810 C.E.). CVZ is known to us from written documents only. CVZ had a distinct perfect morpheme, which has largely disappeared in modern Zapotec languages. This chapter surveys descriptions of the perfect in colonial grammars, as well as corpus evidence to describe the range of uses of perfect morphology. It contrasts the colonial system with the aspectual system of modern Zapotec to trace the diachronic development of aspectual morphology in these languages.

Abstract

Colonial Valley Zapotec (CVZ) is the form of Zapotec spoken in the Valley of Oaxaca during the Spanish colonial period (ca 1550–1810 C.E.). CVZ is known to us from written documents only. CVZ had a distinct perfect morpheme, which has largely disappeared in modern Zapotec languages. This chapter surveys descriptions of the perfect in colonial grammars, as well as corpus evidence to describe the range of uses of perfect morphology. It contrasts the colonial system with the aspectual system of modern Zapotec to trace the diachronic development of aspectual morphology in these languages.

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