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Showing 1 to 15 of 78 results Save | Export
Plumlee, Marilyn – 1995
This paper provides an analysis of the manual and non-manual pronouns identified in Mexican Sign Language (MSL) used by a female speaker in 1993, discusses syntactic uses of each type, and examines pronoun deletion. MSL has two distinct modes of expressing pronominal relationships: manual pronouns (including indexical, incorporated, classifiers,…
Descriptors: Deafness, Foreign Countries, Language Patterns, Pronouns
Black, Cheryl A. – 1996
Many of the Zapotecan (Mexico) languages have a unique way of signaling co-reference between the subject and the possessor of the object: the subject is null. Analysis of such a construction is problematic to current theories of anaphoric construction. In this analysis, the construction is described and the theoretical problem is underlined by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
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Zanuttini, Raffaella; Portner, Paul – Language, 2000
Outlines the structural pattern of exclamative clauses in Paduan. Because of the close similarity between exclamative and interrogative clauses in this language, tests are developed for distinguishing these two clause types. A range of exclamative structures is then presented. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Language Tests, Phrase Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Proulx, Paul – 1991
An analysis of pronouns in Proto-Algic, the ancestor of Proto-Algonquian and other languages, revealed that the Proto-Algic demonstrative roots and locatives had three inflectional endings, referring to spatial or temporal distributions of entities, which evolve into the gender systems of Yurok and Algonquian. Proto-Algic had two discourse…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Hristova, Doreana – 1990
In both French and Macedonian there are constructions that are reminiscent of the passive but their meaning is active. In French this occurs with participial statements that appear to have either an instrumental relationship or be a chronological marker (e.g., "le dejeuner fini,..."). In Macedonian, one only adds a marker showing…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Foreign Countries, French, Language Patterns
Arrieta, Kutz; And Others – 1986
The extent to which Basque displays ergative characteristics (an ergative language treats the underlying subject of intransitive clauses alike in some manner and differently from the underlying subject of transitive clauses) in its syntax is examined. The amount of evidence needed to conclude that Basque or any other language is ergative is…
Descriptors: Basque, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Prince, Ellen F. – 1988
An analysis of two different WH-clause types (relative clauses and free relatives/indirect questions) in Yiddish investigates the acceptability of a gap in the first position. A model is presented that accounts for the differences between the two by positing three constraints on their formation. It is then argued that either these constraints…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
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Yalwa, Lawan Danladi – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1994
This paper describes and analyzes the complementation patter of Hausa aspectual verbs, examining some instances of aspectual verb complementation that have not been addressed in previous research. It attempts to show that, syntactically, the phenomenon of Control in this type of complementation exists in Hausa. It demonstrates that the…
Descriptors: Grammar, Hausa, Language Patterns, Language Research
Levinsohn, Stephen H. – 1990
An analysis of Hebrew topicalization looks at the normal or unmarked function of topicalization in narrative discourse and considers the additional contextual effects that marked or apparently redundant instances of topicalization are intended to achieve. Focus is on the fronting of elements in sentences with topic-comment articulation. It is…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Grammar, Hebrew, Language Patterns
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Jang, Youngjun – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1997
A study of the distribution and the nature of the so-called Multiple Subject Construction (MSC) in Korean is presented from the perspective of functional syntax theory. The major proposal is that multiple subjectivization is possible only when the first noun phrase of the multiple subjects is characterized by the rest of the clause. The…
Descriptors: Grammar, Idioms, Korean, Language Patterns
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lu, Jung-Ying – World Englishes, 1991
Code-switching (CS) patterns of bilingual English-Mandarin speakers underwent structural and functional analysis to reveal the interrelationship between form and function in bilingual CS discourse. Results indicate that certain syntactic forms are utilized to express certain functions in CS discourse and that interlocutor participation helps…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language), English, Language Patterns
Villalba, Xavier – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1994
This paper examines the distribution of third person pronominal clitics in Catalan causative constructions (CC), suggesting that an analysis of CC and cliticization crucially involving head-movement (verb incorporation and determiner incorporation) can explain the phenomena. Such an analysis can also explain the optionality of clitic climbing and…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Language Patterns
Ichihashi, Kumiko – 1991
The distribution of Hualapai auxiliary verbs "-yu" and "-wi" can not be explained only by the presence or absence of an object, or by the active or stative feature of the matrix verb. It can be explained in terms of transitivity, in that "-wi" corresponds to high transitivity and "-yu" to low transitivity of…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research
Chung, Young Hee – 1989
A study of Karok, an American Indian language spoken in northern California, provides an argument for CV theory over moraic theory from compensatory lengthening. In a previous study, moraic theory is argued to be superior to CV phonology in accounting for compensatory lengthening; it is shown here that compensatory lengthening in Karok cannot be…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Tuggy, David – 1989
The verb stem "maka" ("give") in Nahuatl is unusual in its range of options with respect to transitivity. Like all transitive verb stems, it regularly occurs with an object and must do so, but it also appears in an unusually large number of constructions in which it has two objects. These constructions are examined within the…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research
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