Kunwinjku : a language of Western Arnhem Land
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Carroll, Peter John
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
Kunwinjku is a prefixing language with noun classification, spoken at
Oenpelli and known in other areas of Western Arnhem Land in the Northern
Territory of Australia. Its traditional territory is adjacent to other
prefixing languages such as Maung, Gunbalang, Dangbon, Djeibmi and
Mengerr. Not all of these languages have noun classification.
Kunwinjku has an extensive prefixing system in a complex verb morphology.
Suffixes also occur with the verb to indicate tense, mood and
aspect. A few local cases, but none of the major syntactic cases,
occur with nominals. One part of the pronominal system differentiates
four persons and three numbers, while the other part only differentiates
three persons and two numbers.
This thesis is designed to supplement and correct (in part) the
published grammar (Oates 1964). There are two main parts, Phonology
and Syntax. Morphology, which was the main section in Oates, is
considered in passing when it is pertinent to matters being discussed
in the two main sections. Aspects of the morphology can be seen in
different sections of the thesis - pronominal system (section 5.1.4),
verbal morphology (sections 5.1, 5.2, 7 and Appendix A), nominal
prefixing (sections 5.1.2, 8.3.3) and nominal suffixes (section 8.3.5).
The phonemic system proposed has one less phoneme than that of
Oates (no laminal lateral) and is justified by minimal and near minimal
contrasts (section 3). The phonemic status of glottal stop is considered
(section 2.9). Natural classes are established by distribution
patterns of the phonemes. Prefixing and suffixing alternations are
discussed and a distinctive feature classification is proposed.
Principles proposed by Ladefoged (1971) are followed and some of the
features proposed have a phonetic rather than a classificatory basis.
A multivalued feature of vowel height is shown to be more adequate
to describe the vowel raising that occurs in some verb suffixes.
The syntactic discussion is basically a presentation of surface
structure with concentration on the constituents of a simple sentence
and their order. It is proposed that the underlying order is that found in the prefixing system which differs from the most frequent
surface order. A short section indicates some of the ways in which
one simple sentence may be subordinated to another.
The appendixes contain a paper on Kunwinjku verb suffixation and
two texts with translations.
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