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Preparing for task: linguistic formats for procedural instructions in early years schooling
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Diverging from 'business as usual'. Turn-initial ngala in Garrwa conversation
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Tools of engagement: selecting a next speaker in Australian Aboriginal multiparty conversations
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Dis, that and da other: variation in Aboriginal children's article and demonstrative use at school
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Young children's tool innovation across culture: Affordance visibility matters
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Da Symbol Dat Under da Stuffs: teaching the language of maths to Aboriginal learners of standard Australian English as a second dialect
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The impact of interaction and language on leading learning in Indigenous classrooms
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Rethinking Australian Aboriginal English-based speech varieties: evidence from Woorabinda
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Linguistic cues for recipient design in an Indigenous Australian conversational narrative
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Free to Bound to Free? Interactions Between Pragmatics and Syntax in the Development of Australian Pronominal Systems
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In: Language (Washington) (2015)
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Free to Bound to Free? Interactions Between Pragmatics and Syntax in the Development of Australian Pronominal Systems
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In: Language (Washington) (2015)
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Abstract:
Data from dual pronoun systems in Australian languages is used to show the pragmatic basis for a cycle of pronoun creation - reduced pronouns from free forms and free from reduced - and the motivation to maintain both types in a linguistic system. Free pronouns become positionally restricted reduced forms by association of clause-initial position with discourse prominence (Swartz 1988, Choi 1999). The same pragmatic motivations result in the creation of new free pronouns, and the divergence of free and reduced pronouns with respect to ergative case marking. Examples of languages at different stages of the cycle include Garrwa (one set of free pronouns, with a strong preference for second position); Djambarrpuyngu and Gupapuyngu (two sets of pronouns transparently related in form and in complementary distribution); Ritharrngu, Djinang, and Djinba (two sets of pronouns transparently related in form but in which the reduced pronouns are becoming obligatory); Warlpiri (two sets of pronouns, which diverge in form, and the reduced set is obligatory); and Warumungu (one set of reduced pronouns, indicating how new free pronouns might emerge based on information-packaging principles). The creation of free pronouns from reduced pronouns argues against strict unidirectionality of change.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1353/lan.0.0048 http://hdl.handle.net/1885/26040
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'Up dere la': final particle la in a Queensland Aboriginal vernacular
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