<p>"Dr. Avelino Corral Esteban has produced an impressive and insightful analysis of complex sentences in Cheyenne, a Native American language of the Algonquian family. It presents some unique challenges for any theoretical approach, and Dr. Corral Esteban employs a functional-typological theory, Role and Reference Grammar, which has a sophisticated theory of clause linkage. The result is a very revealing exploration of Cheyenne complex sentences. It is an important contribution to the study of Algonquian languages, on the one hand, and to functional linguistics and language typology, on the other."</p><p>Prof (emeritus) Robert D. Van Valin, Jr., University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf</p><p>"This outstanding contribution of Prof. Avelino Corral to a better understanding of the grammar of Cheyenne, a critically endangered Algonquian language spoken in Montana and Oklahoma, is a unique and insightful exploration of the complex sentences of this Algonquian language according to the premises of Role and Reference Grammar. To this purpose he also provides an accurate and unmatched research on the iconic relationship between the syntactic and semantic dimensions of these sentences with the aim of improving the preservation and revitalization of this ancestral language."</p><p>Prof. Ricardo Mairal Usón, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)</p><p>"Dr Avelino Corral Esteban’s monograph is a timely and welcome investigation of Cheyenne, a severely endangered Plains Algonquian language spoken in Montana and Oklahoma (USA). Offering empirically rich and theoretically sophisticated analyses of predicate and clause linkage, and other aspects of the polysynthetic head-marking grammar of Cheyenne, the volume testifies to the critical importance of lesser studied languages for the advancement of knowledge in linguistic theory. It will be of interest to researchers in the discourse-semantics-syntax interface, field linguists, and the Tsėhésenėstsestȯtse speakers themselves."</p><p>Professor Delia Bentley, The University of Manchester</p><p>"Offering an enlightening examination of the Cheyenne language, this book comes to satisfy the dire need for studies which describe seriously endangered languages. The volume provides an analysis of complex sentences in Cheyenne from the perspective of Role and Reference Grammar (RRG), one of the most fascinating grammatical theories which aims at explaining the structure of languages from a non-Anglocentric standpoint. By means of a wealth of data and analyses, ranging from morphology and syntax to semantics and pragmatics, Dr. Corral manages to cover the linguistic intricacies of these structures. This book is an indispensable reference for typological linguists and RRG practitioners."</p><p>Prof. Francisco José Cortés Rodríguez, Universidad de La Laguna</p>

Cheyenne: An Analysis of Clause Linkage provides a detailed description of Cheyenne syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, notably on its nominal and verbal system and in both simple and complex sentences.

Based on fieldwork conducted on the Northern Cheyenne reservation, this book, which seeks to address descriptive and theoretical issues involving complex sentences, has three major aims: i) to present a morpho-syntactic, semantic, and discourse-pragmatic description of complex sentences in Cheyenne; ii) to investigate the relationship between the semantic and syntactic dimensions of complex sentences; and iii) to contribute to the research, preservation, and revitalization of this ancestral language spoken in the United States of America.

This book will be informative for scholars interested in language typology, comparative linguistics, theoretical linguistics, and language documentation, as well as those interested in Cheyenne learning and teaching.

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<p><em>Cheyenne</em> provides a detailed description of Cheyenne syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, notably on its nominal and verbal system and in both simple and complex sentences.</p>

Cheyenne flag

Preface

List of tables

List of figures

List of abbreviations

1 Introduction

1.1 Background information

1.2 Overview of Cheyenne

1.2.1 Sociolinguistic information

1.2.2 Genealogical position

1.2.3 Basic points on the phonology of Cheyenne

1.2.4 Spelling system

1.3 Basic morphosyntactic properties of Cheyenne

1.3.1 Polsynthetic morphology

1.3.2 Morphosyntactic alignment

1.3.3 Information structure

1.3.4 The verbal complex

1.3.5 Grammatical categories

1.3.6 Lexical categories

1.3.7. Morphosyntactic coding of arguments

Notes

2 RRG and Cheyenne simple sentences

2.1 The syntactic representation of a sentence

2.2 The semantic representation of a sentence

2.3 Information structure

2.4 The linking algorithm

Notes

3 Clause linkage theory

3.1 Theoretical approaches to the study of complex sentences

3.2 The RRG approach to the study of the structure of complex sentences

Notes

4 Juncture-nexus combinations

4.1 Nuclear junctures

4.2 Core junctures

4.3 Clausal junctures

4.4 Sentential junctures

Notes

5 Semantic relations between units

5.1 Single actions

5.1.1 Causative [1]

5.1.2 Modifying sub-actions

5.1.3 Phase

5.2 Multiple actions

5.2.1 Simultaneous

5.2.2 Sequential

5.2.3 Causative [2]

5.3 Endeavour

5.3.1 Attempt

5.3.2 Success

5.3.3 Failure

5.4 Intentions

5.4.1 Refusal

5.4.2 Psych-action

5.4.3 Purposive

5.5 Bringing about

5.5.1 Causative [3]

5.5.2 Jussive

5.5.3 Permissive

5.5.4 Injunctive

5.6 Perception

5.6.1 Direct perception

5.6.2 Indirect perception

5.7 Intentionality

5.7.1 Propositional attitude

5.7.2 Cognition

5.7.3 Emotion

5.8 Speech

5.8.1 Indirect discourse

5.8.2 Direct discourse

5.9 Locational

5.9.1 Space

5.9.2 Time

5.10 Circumstances

5.10.1 Reason

5.10.2 Conditional

5.10.3 Concessive

5.11 Temporality

5.11.1 Temporal / Simultaneous actions

5.11.2 Temporal / Sequential actions

5.11.3 Situation-situation / temporally unordered SoAs

5.12 Complex RPs

Notes

6 Relationship between clause linkage types and semantic relations

6.1 Intereclausal relations hierarchy

6.2 Iconic correlation between syntactic and semantic representations

Notes

7 The role of discourse-pragmatics in complex sentences

7.1 Information structure in complex sentences

7.2 Obviation in Cheyenne narration

Notes

8 Concluding remarks

Glossary of RRG terms

References

Appendix

Index

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032319971
Publisert
2023-07-31
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
310

Biografisk notat

Avelino Corral Esteban works as a Senior Lecturer in Linguistics at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain, where he teaches courses on syntax, historical linguistics, and information structure. His main areas of research cover the interaction between syntax, semantics, and pragmatics across languages, with a focus on Native American, Romance, Germanic, and Celtic languages. He has collaborated in research projects funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, the Arts and Humanities Research Council in the UK, and the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival in the USA, and he co-leads the Honóxease Project, the aim of which is to foster the preservation and revitalization of the Cheyenne language. He also received the Phillips Fund grant for Native American Research and the Benjamin Franklin grant from the American Philosophical Society. He is the author of seven book chapters, published by Cambridge University Press, De Gruyter, John Benjamins, Peter Lang, and Routledge, and more than 20 research articles, which have appeared in major linguistics journals (Acta Linguistica Academica, Journal of Language Contact, Journal of Language and Intercultural Communication, RESLA, WORD, and Zeitschrift für Romanische Philologie).