Nilo-Saharan - models and descriptions
- 401 Seiten
- 15 Lesestunden
INHALT: Adelino Amargira examines number and case inflection in Tennet nouns and adjectives, while Pascal Boyeldieu explores case alignment in Sinyar. Prisca Jerono discusses case marking in Tugen, and Terrill Schrock analyzes case as a meta-categorical heuristic in Ik grammaticography. Colleen Ahland investigates the morpheme /tsa/ ‘body’ in Gumuz through synchronic and diachronic lenses. Stefan Bruckhaus focuses on locational nouns in Datooga, and Susanne Neudorf studies body part lexemes in Berta. Russell Norton presents an internal reconstruction of the Ama dual suffix, and Manuel A. Otero looks at dual number in Ethiopian Komo. Christine Waag and Martin Phodunze detail the pronominal system of Baka, while Gregory D. S. Anderson examines stamp morphs in Central Sudanic languages. Andreas Joswig addresses syntactic sensitivity in Majang, and Don Killian delves into complex verbal predicates in Uduk. Angelika Mietzner discusses motion verbs in Cherang’any (Kalenjin), and Doris L. Payne offers perspectives on Nilotic verb composition. Helga Schröder analyzes mixed pivot constraints in Toposa clause chaining, and Chelimo Andrew Kiprop studies tone and tongue root as ventive morphemes in Endo-Marakwet. Jane Akinyi Ngala Oduor explores syllable weight and stress in Dholuo, while Diane Lesley-Neuman investigates Eastern Nilotic vowel harmony. Nate D. Bremer reexamines Berta and the East Jebel subfamily, and Richard Griscom traces