The Tukang Besi language of southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia
Date
1995
Authors
Donohue, Mark
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Abstract
This thesis describes the synchronic grammar of the Tukang Besi language of Indonesia.
Tukang Besi is an Austronesian language whose home islands lie in the province of'
Southeast Sulawesi in Central Indonesia. It appears to subgroup more closely with the
languages of Sulawesi than with the languages of Maluku, but its close genetic affiliations
remain uncertain.
The language displays elements common to the Philippine-type languages that are mainly
found to the north and west of it, such as the presence of a 'focus' system, as well as
many elements found in the languages of eastern Indonesia and western Oceania, such as
pronominal indexing on the verb. The interaction of these two seemingly incompatible
systems is responsible for many of the complexities of Tukang Besi grammar.
Tukang Besi is a head-marking language, with extensive verbal affixing that also serves to
drive the Philippine-type 'focus' system. The subject is obligatorily indexed on the verb,
and the object optionally (but preferably) so. Nominals, which are optional due to the
indexing on the verb, are case-marked to indicate their status as core or oblique arguments
in the clause; the division between these two layers of the clause is evidenced by numerous
processes and constraints that apply to the two categories in different ways. There are two
cases that may be assigned to core arguments, nqminative and non-nominative, and these
are pragmatic cases (with syntactic effects), not semantically based cases. The case
marking on core nominals is dependent not only on the case assigned to the argument, but
also on the position of that nominal in the clause.
Oblique arguments are marked by an oblique article, prepositions, or one of a variety of
verbs in special non-contiguous serial verb constructions that show different degrees of
grammaticalisation, behaving unlike 'true' verbs and more like prepositions in some
respects. Contiguous serialisation is also found in the language, and is in many respects
indistinguishable from the extensive valency-increasing morphology in terms of the effects
achieved. There are three casuative processes, three applicative suffixes, and three passive
prefixes.
A particular feature of the grammar is the use of different pivots for different grammatical
processes. Some processes are sensitive to the case an argument bears, and others are
sensitive to the syntactic role that the argument bears in the clause regardless of its case.
Yet others are dependent on the thematic roles that an argument bears, irrespective of its
pragmatic case or syntactic role.
The data have been presented in a loose structuralist framework as much as possible, in
order to avoid prejudging the linguistic facts in favour of one or the other linguistic
theories. In the description of causative and applicative processes, however, reference to
thematic roles and a ranked thematic hierarchy has proven to be an invaluable descriptive
tool. Many grammatical processes are easily explained by reference to this hierarchy.
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