Results 121 to 130 of about 2,034,850 (166)
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The Oxford Handbook of African Languages, 2020
Abstract The South Cushitic or West Rift Cushitic languages split into two branches: Southern vs. Northern. While the Southern branch continues in Burunge, the Northern branch comprises Alagwa and Iraqwoid, which includes the dialects Gorwaa and Iraqw. Internal convergence of Alagwa towards the Southern branch produced bundles of Burunge/
R. Kießling
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Abstract The South Cushitic or West Rift Cushitic languages split into two branches: Southern vs. Northern. While the Southern branch continues in Burunge, the Northern branch comprises Alagwa and Iraqwoid, which includes the dialects Gorwaa and Iraqw. Internal convergence of Alagwa towards the Southern branch produced bundles of Burunge/
R. Kießling
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Maarten Mous: Alagwa-a South Cushitic language of Tanzania: Grammar, Texts and Lexicon
Journal of African Languages and Linguistics, 2018A. Harvey
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South cushitic lateral consonants as compared to semitic and east cushitic
1987Aron B. Dolgopolsky
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The first person prefixes in South Ethio-Semitic
Journal of African Languages and Linguistics, 2023South Ethio-Semitic (SES) is a genealogical branch of Ethio-Semitic (ES), a subgroup of Semitic found almost entirely in Ethiopia and Eritrea. The paper considers two features characteristic of several South Ethio-Semitic languages.
M. Bulakh
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The Oxford Handbook of African Languages, 2020
This chapter describes the Central Cushitic (hereafter CC) language family, one of four branches of Cushitic. CC, traditionally known as Agäw, contains four languages: Awŋi, Bilin, Kemantney, and Xamt’aŋa.
Zelealem Leyew
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This chapter describes the Central Cushitic (hereafter CC) language family, one of four branches of Cushitic. CC, traditionally known as Agäw, contains four languages: Awŋi, Bilin, Kemantney, and Xamt’aŋa.
Zelealem Leyew
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The Oxford Handbook of Grammatical Number, 2021
This chapter discusses the representation and processing of grammatical number in language comprehension and production. Grammatical number is regarded as a syntactic feature stored with a word's lemma, i.e. the syntactic word, in the mental lexicon. The
N. Schiller, Rinus G. Verdonschot
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This chapter discusses the representation and processing of grammatical number in language comprehension and production. Grammatical number is regarded as a syntactic feature stored with a word's lemma, i.e. the syntactic word, in the mental lexicon. The
N. Schiller, Rinus G. Verdonschot
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The Oxford Handbook of African Languages, 2020
This chapter describes the grammatical structure of Sidaama (Sidamo), a Highland East Cushitic language spoken in the south-central part of Ethiopia. Although more than three million people speak Sidaama, there has been relatively little research on the ...
Kazuhiro Kawachi
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This chapter describes the grammatical structure of Sidaama (Sidamo), a Highland East Cushitic language spoken in the south-central part of Ethiopia. Although more than three million people speak Sidaama, there has been relatively little research on the ...
Kazuhiro Kawachi
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The use of the ablative clitic in locative phrases in Iraqw, a Cushitic language of Tanzania
Journal of African Languages and Linguistics, 2018This paper examines the use of the ablative case clitic in locative phrases in Iraqw, a South Cushitic language of Tanzania. In the typological classification of locative marker syncretisms, Iraqw has been classified as a language with a Source=Location≠
A. Kruijt
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Journal of Linguistics, 2019
sources, even while remaining firmly a generativist. For instance, the idea of plurative is modelled in part on a discussion within Cushitic linguistics (e.g. Tsegaye, Mous & Schiller 2014: 193).
Shiloh Drake
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sources, even while remaining firmly a generativist. For instance, the idea of plurative is modelled in part on a discussion within Cushitic linguistics (e.g. Tsegaye, Mous & Schiller 2014: 193).
Shiloh Drake
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