Body-parts in Dalabon and Barunga Kriol: matches and mismatches

Date

Authors

Ponsonnet, Maïa
Australian Linguistic Society

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Australian Linguistic Society

Abstract

This article describes a number of body-part lexemes in Dalabon, a non-Pama-Nyungan language of the Gunwinyguan family (Australia), and their counterparts in Barunga Kriol, the local creole. The aim of this paper is a comparison between some aspects of the Dalabon body-part lexicon and their counterparts in Barunga Kriol. I discuss particularities of the Dalabon bodypart lexicon and of linguistic descriptions of the body in this language. Throughout the study of Dalabon and Barunga Kriol lexemes denoting the hand (or front paw) and its digits, the foot (or back paw) and its digits, the face, the nose and the nostrils, and finally, the head and the crown of the head, it is found that Barunga Kriol replicates some of the lexical structures of the local Aboriginal languages, but not all of them. In particular, a remarkable specificity of Dalabon, the fact that the head and the face are not labelled as such, and are preferably described as an assemblage of features, is only partially replicated in Barunga Kriol. The paper seeks to identify some of the factors explaining the matches and mismatches between Barunga Kriol and Dalabon

Description

Keywords

body-parts, Dalabon, Barunga Kriol, creole development, substrate influence

Citation

Ponsonnet, M. (2012). Body-parts in Dalabon and Barunga Kriol: Matches and mismatches. In M. Ponsonnet, L. Dao & M. Bowler (Eds), Proceedings of the 42nd Australian Linguistic Society Conference – 2011, Australian National University, Canberra ACT, 2-4 December 2011 (pp. 352-388).

Source

Proceedings of the 42nd Australian Linguistic Society Conference 2011

Type

Conference paper

Book Title

Australian Linguistic Society Conference

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Open Access

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