
Subordination in Native South American Languages
Rik van Gijn (Ed.), Katharina Haude (Ed.), Pieter Muysken (Ed.)
In terms of its linguistic and cultural make-up, the continent of South America provides linguists and anthropologists with a complex puzzle of language diversity. The continent teems with small language families and isolates, and even languages spoken in adjacent areas can be typologically vastly different from each other. This volume intends to provide a taste of the linguistic diversity found in South America within the area of clause subordination. The potential variety in the strategies that languages can use to encode subordinate events is enormous, yet there are clearly dominant patterns to be discerned: switch reference marking, clause chaining, nominalization, and verb serialization. The book also contributes to the continuing debate on the nature of syntactic complexity, as evidenced in subordination.
Categories:
Content Type:
BooksYear:
2011
Edition:
1st
Publisher:
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Language:
english
Pages:
328
ISBN 10:
9027206783
ISBN 13:
9789027206787
Series:
Typological Studies in Language 97
File:
PDF, 5.69 MB
IPFS:
,
english, 2011