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11.3 Other discourse particles

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A Grammar of Tamashek (Tuareg of Mali)
This chapter is in the book A Grammar of Tamashek (Tuareg of Mali)

Chapters in this book

  1. I-XVIII I
  2. 1 Introduction
  3. Introduction 1
  4. 2 Overview
  5. Overview 11
  6. 3 Phonology.
  7. 3.1 Segments 23
  8. 3.2 Local assimilations and syllabification rules 42
  9. 3.3 Accent 81
  10. 3.4 Ablaut 98
  11. 3.5 Syntactically controlled phonological processes 146
  12. 4 Nominal and pronominal morphology.
  13. 4.1 Noun morphology 161
  14. 4.2 Independent personal pronouns 237
  15. 4.3 Demonstratives 238
  16. 5 Noun phrase structure.
  17. 5.1 Nominal modifiers 243
  18. 5.2 Possession and compounding 257
  19. 6 Prepositions.
  20. 6.1 Inventory of true prepositions 272
  21. 6.2 Pronominal suffixes with prepositions 274
  22. 6.3 Dative (or Purposive) 275
  23. 6.4 Instrumental and Comitative 276
  24. 6.5 Spatial prepositions 281
  25. 6.6 Compound prepositions 288
  26. 6.7 Preposition-like particles 291
  27. 7 Verbal morphology.
  28. 7.1 Augment verbs with -t- 293
  29. 7.2 Stem categories 299
  30. 7.3 Verb classes and irregular verbs. 7.3.1 Regular classes 341
  31. 7.3 Verb classes and irregular verbs. 7.3.2 Irregular and suppletive verbs 411
  32. 7.4 Pronominal subject paradigms 431
  33. 8 Verbal derivation.
  34. 8.1 Causative (-s-, -s̩-, -š-, -z-, -ž-, -z̩-, -svw-) 439
  35. 8.2 Passive (-t-, -tt-, -tvw-) 466
  36. 8.3 Mediopassive (-m-, -η-, -nvy-) 471
  37. 8.4 Reciprocal -nvm-, -m-, -n- 476
  38. 8.5 Participles (subject relatives) 481
  39. 8.6 Verbal nouns 506
  40. 8.7 Adjectival nouns without derivational prefix 536
  41. 8.8 Agentives 539
  42. 8.9 Nonagentive nominals with -m- or -n- 549
  43. 8.10 Denominal agentives (-mæs-, -næs-, etc.) 552
  44. 8.11 Instrumental (and related) nominals with -s- or -s-vg- prefix 554
  45. 8.12 Other nominals 561
  46. 9 Verb phrases and other predications.
  47. 9.1 Voice (valency) types of verbs 573
  48. 9.2 Copular predications (‘be’, ‘become’) 580
  49. 9.3 Locational and existential predications 582
  50. 9.4 Possessive predications 584
  51. 9.5 External negation and negative copular clauses 585
  52. 9.6 Preverbs 586
  53. 9.7 Verbs borrowed from French 594
  54. 10 Clitics.
  55. 10.1 Sentential clitics 595
  56. 10.2 Directional clitics 595
  57. 10.3 Pronominal clitics 603
  58. 10.4 Ordering of clitics 610
  59. 11 Dicourse-functional particles and topicalization.
  60. 11.1 Topicalization 615
  61. 11.2 Emphatics 616
  62. 11.3 Other discourse particles 617
  63. 12 Extraction.
  64. 12.1 Relativization 623
  65. 12.2 Focalization 642
  66. 12.3 Interrogatives 649
  67. 13 Clausal subordination.
  68. 13.1 Adverbial clauses 663
  69. 13.2 Purposive and causal clauses 671
  70. 13.3 Jussive and subjunctive clauses (à.\d) 674
  71. 13.4 Add-on small clauses 680
  72. 13.5 Verbs with verbal noun complements 683
  73. 13.6 Verbs and particles with finite complements 687
  74. 13.7 Factive ‘that’ complements (s, à-\s) 692
  75. 13.8 Reported speech and thought 695
  76. 13.9 Conditionals 696
  77. 13.10 Possessive ̩ә̀n plus ‘that’ complement 700
  78. 14 Coordination.
  79. 14.1 NP coordination 702
  80. 14.2 Clausal coordination 706
  81. 15 Anaphora.
  82. 15.1 Reflexive 708
  83. 15.2 Reciprocal 709
  84. 16 Text
  85. Text 711
  86. Indices 727
  87. References 744
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