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Concreteness in Grammar (Stanford Studies in Morphology and the Lexicon) (Hardcover)

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Description


Based on an exhaustive search of published sources and the author’s firsthand fieldwork, Concreteness in Grammar explores the role of phonological form in the noun class systems of the Arapesh languages spoken in Papua New Guinea. Linguists have long known that formal critical play a role alongside semantics in the classification of lexical terms. In Arapesh, virtually every possible final ending of a noun is represented in the paradigm of noun class and agreement markers, reflecting an interpenetraion of sound structure and grammar that many theories would disallow as wildly unconstrained. In this book, Lise Dobrin describes these formal patterns in order to reveal their naturalness and elegance, establishing their place in a typology of noun class systems and drawing out their significance for theories of grammatical architecture.A rigorous study of an endangered language, Concreteness in Grammar revisits the definition of a morpheme and looks at unusual language patterns to reveal the naturalness of grammar.

About the Author


Lise Dobrin is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Linguistics program at the University of Virginia. She has done linguistic and ethnographic fieldwork in Papua New Guinea, and published articles in Language, American Anthropologist, Histories of Anthropology Annual and the chapter on Arapesh in Facts About the World’s Languages: An Encyclopedia of the World’s Languages.


Product Details
ISBN: 9781575866079
Publisher: Center for the Study of Language and Inf
Publication Date: March 15th, 2013
Pages: 240
Series: Stanford Studies in Morphology and the Lexicon