Breaking the clause chains: non-canonical medial clauses in Nungon

Date

2015-10

Authors

Sarvasy, Hannah

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

John Benjamins

Abstract

Clause chaining in Papuan languages is a keystone of the literature on switch-reference (Haiman and Munro 1983, Stirling 1993). Canonically, a clause chain is considered to comprise one or more ‘medial’ clauses, followed by a single ‘final’ clause. In Nungon and other Papuan languages, canonical clause chains coexist with non-canonical clause chains, which either feature medial clauses postposed after the final clause, or lack a final clause altogether. I examine the functions of non-canonical medial clauses in Nungon and other Papuan languages in a first attempt at a typology of these uses, given scanty data. Non-canonical medial clauses are argued to represent canny use of the features of clause chains and switch-reference systems to convey meaning efficiently. The exposition also solves an outstanding puzzle of the Amele switch-reference system (Roberts 1988, Stirling 1993).

Description

Keywords

Nungon, Papuan, switch-reference, linguistics, clause, chains, non-cano ical, desubordination, insubordination, linguistics

Citation

Source

Studies in language

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until