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Language and dialect relations in Bumthang
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In: Himalayan Linguistics, vol 19, iss 3 (2020)
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The asymmetrical categories of negation in Bumthang
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In: Himalayan Linguistics, vol 19, iss 1 (2020)
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Extended ergativity in Bumthang
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In: Himalayan Linguistics, vol 18, iss 2 (2019)
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Areal typology, history, and a central Bhutanese language ...
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Polarity, case marking and aspect in Bumthang, a central Bhutanese language ...
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Farming and Language in Island Southeast Asia: Reframing Austronesian History
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In: Current Anthropology (2015)
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Prefixal 'suffixes' in Skou
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In: Australian Journal of Linguistics (2015)
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Covert word classes: Seeking your own syntax in Tukang Besi
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In: Studies in Language (2015)
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The Papuan language of Tambora
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In: Oceanic Linguistics ; http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/ol/ (2015)
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On the special status of instrumentals
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In: Proceedings of the LFG '04 Conference ; http://csli-publications.stanford.edu/LFG/9/lfg04.html ; http://cslipublications.stanford.edu/LFG/9/lfg04.html (2015)
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Syntactic and lexical factors conditioning the diffusion of sound change
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In: Oceanic Linguistics (2015)
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Prefixal 'suffixes' in Skou
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In: Australian Journal of Linguistics (2015)
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Abstract:
Skou, a language of North-Central New Guinea, shows agreement on verbs by what appear to be monoconsonantal prefixes. A detailed analysis shows that the morphemes must be considered to be aligned to the right edge of the word, but are realized further left due to strict phonotactic constraints. Furthermore, the phonotactic constraint that dictates against the right-aligned morphemes appearing as suffixes, NoCoda, is the same one that is famously responsible for the infixation of left-aligned morphemes in Austronesian languages, showing that not only is right-edge aligned infixation perhaps not quite as rare as has been thought, but that it is governed by the same phonotactic constraints that determine left-aligned infixation. A historical motivation for this unusual alignment change is discussed, with a cautionary note on the use of underanalysed data in typological work.
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1885/56360
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Consensus and the lexicon in historical linguistics: Rejoinder to "basic vocabulary and Bayesian phylolinguistics"
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In: Diachronica (2015)
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Proto-Oceanic *ma- and the adjectives: Oceanic as seen through possibly productive morphology in Tukang Besi
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In: Oceanic Linguistics ; http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/ol/ (2015)
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Proto-Oceanic *ma- and the adjectives: Oceanic as seen through possibly productive morphology in Tukang Besi
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In: Oceanic Linguistics ; http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/ol/ (2015)
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The Language of Lapita: Vanuatu and an early Papuan Presence in the Pacific
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In: Oceanic Linguistics (2015)
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Yet more on the position of the languages of eastern Indonesia and East Timor
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In: Oceanic Linguistics (2015)
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