A Grammar of Lopit

A Grammar of Lopit
Author: Jonathan Moodie
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 505
Release: 2020-09-25
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9004430679

In A Grammar of Lopit, Jonathan Moodie and Rosey Billington provide a detailed description of the phonology, morphology, and syntax of Lopit, an Eastern Nilotic language traditionally spoken in the Lopit Mountains in South Sudan.

Language Typology and Syntactic Description: Volume 3

Language Typology and Syntactic Description: Volume 3
Author: Timothy Shopen
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 444
Release: 1985-07-25
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780521318990

The three volumes of Language typology and syntactic description offer a unique survey of syntactic and morphological structure in the languages of the world. Topics covered include parts of speech; passives; complementation; relative clauses; adverbial clauses; inflectional morphology; tense; aspect and mood; and deixis. The major ways these notions are realized u=in the languages of the world are explored, and the contributors provide brief sketches of relevant aspects of representative languages. Each volume is written in an accessible style with new concepts explained and exemplified as they are introduced. Although each volume can be read independently, together they provide a major work of reference that will serve as a manual for field workers and anyone interested in cross-linguistic generalizations.

Subordination

Subordination
Author: Sonia Cristofaro
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 372
Release: 2003-07-10
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0191554855

This book presents a typology of subordination systems across the world's languages. Traditional definitions of subordination are based on morphosyntactic criteria, such as clausal embedding or non-finiteness. The book shows that these definitions are untenable in a cross-linguistic perspective, and provides a cognitively based definition of subordination. The analysis is based on a representative 80 language sample, and represents the broadest study so far conducted on the cross-linguistic coding of several types of complement, adverbial, and relative sentence. These sentence types display considerable structural variation across languages. However, this variation turns out to be constrained, and appears crucially related to the functional properties of individual sentence types. This work is the first systematic attempt to establish comprehensive implicational hierarchies describing the coding of complement, adverbial and relative sentences at a single stroke. Concepts from typological theory and cognitive linguistics are integrated to account for these hierarchies.