The Ngkolmpu Language with special reference to distributed exponence
Date
2016
Authors
Carroll, Matthew Jay
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Abstract
The Ngkolmpu language of southern New Guinea is notable for the
remarkable extent to which grammatical values are distributed
across multiple morphosyntactic systems in the language. This is
most apparent in the extremely complex inflectional morphology of
verbs, where the exponence of morphosyntactic feature values is
distributed over a number of inflectional sites, such that
determining the exact value of any given feature requires
unification at multiple structural locations. Moreover, this
phenomenon is not restricted to the inflectional morphology, and
permeates the morphology, syntax and semantics of the language.
This thesis provides the first comprehensive description of the
phonology, morphology and nominal and clausal syntax of Ngkolmpu.
There is a particularly strong focus on the complex verbal
inflectional morphology. In addition to the core description, it
contains an exploration of the phenomenon of distributed
exponence and related structures in the syntax and semantics. The
goal is to chart the extent of this apparently non-optimal
approach to exponence and provide a discussion of the
consequences of such a structure informed by current thinking in
morphological theory.
Chapters 2-7 comprise the descriptive part of the thesis, the
primary goal of which is to give explicit empirical coverage of
the main structural features of the language. As such, it is
written from a framework-free approach in which all categories,
classes and constructions are explicitly defined on a language
particular basis. Chapter 2 sets out the phonemic inventory,
their phonetic realisations and the phonotactics. Chapter 3 is a
description of the nominal morphology, including word structure
and a list of cases, their forms and functions. Chapter 4 is an
account of the nominal syntax; it establishes the various classes
of nominals and sets out the phrase level constituency. Chapter 5
lists the various valency-related constructions of the language.
It establishes a set of valence alternation classes and describes
the syntax and semantics of valence alternation processes.
Chapter 6 is a description of the inflectional and derivational
sites of verbs, focusing on the complex paradigmatic structure of
these sites. Chapter 7 describes the system of stem alternation
and establishes verbal number, aspect and nominal number as
distinct but interacting categories.
The last two chapters change gear and aim at situating the
workings of Ngkolmpu distributed exponence typologically,
informed by advances in realisational approaches to morphology.
Chapter 8 defines the concept of distributed exponence and charts
the extent that features may be distributed in the systems of
verbal inflection. It extends this discussion to draw parallels
in structure across morphological domains of agreement, in the
system of grammatical relations and the semantic interactions
between verbal number and nominal number. Chapter 9 provides an
explicit description of the inflectional sites of verbs in the
light of distributed exponence. The description is presented in
natural language but is firmly within the realisational
tradition, drawing heavily from Paradigm Function Morphology. Its
goal is to explore the consequences of distributed exponence on
realisational approaches to morphological theory and uniquely
proposes a level of morphological autonomy localised to each
particular inflectional site.
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Keywords
Ngkolmpu, Kanum, Ngkntra, Grammar, Papuan Languages, distributed exponence, West Papua, language documentation, language description, morphology, typology, Paradigm-Function Morphology
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Thesis (PhD)
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