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41
Traces Of Pronouns Which May Be Related To Bandjalang (Eastern Australia) 2Sg Wudya 'You' And Some Remarks On Northern Pronouns ...
Schweiger, Fritz. - : Zenodo, 2018
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42
Traces Of Pronouns Which May Be Related To Bandjalang (Eastern Australia) 2Sg Wudya 'You' And Some Remarks On Northern Pronouns ...
Schweiger, Fritz. - : Zenodo, 2018
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43
Argument realisation in Wubuy
Horrack, Kate. - 2018
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44
Reconstructing remote relationships : proto-Australian noun class prefixation
Harvey, Mark; Mailhammer, Robert (R16975). - : Netherlands, John Benjamins Publishing, 2018
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45
Diverging from 'business as usual'. Turn-initial ngala in Garrwa conversation
Mushin, Ilana. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2018
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46
Nominal and pronominal morphology of Ngardi: A Ngumpin-Yapa language of Western Australia
Ennever, Thomas. - : The University of Queensland, School of Languages and Cultures, 2018
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47
A grammar of Kuuk Thaayorre
Gaby, Alice R.. - Berlin [u.a.] : De Gruyter Mouton, 2017
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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48
Languages of the world : an introduction
Pereltsvaig, Asya. - Singapore : Cambridge University Press, 2017
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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49
Studies on Middle Indo-Iranian and Australian Aboriginal languages
Hercus, Luise A. - : Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University, 2017
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50
A replicable acoustic measure of lenition and the nature of variability in Gurindji stops
In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 8, No 1 (2017); 20 ; 1868-6354 (2017)
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51
Test video ...
Williams, Andrew. - : Figshare, 2017
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52
Standard Average Australian ...
Bowern, Claire. - : Zenodo, 2017
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53
Standard Average Australian ...
Bowern, Claire. - : Zenodo, 2017
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54
Language use and language attitudes in a rural South Australian community / presented by Tania H. Sapinski
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55
Pama-Nyungan morphosyntax: lineages of early description
Abstract: A substantial proportion of what is discoverable about the structure of the hundreds of Aboriginal languages that were spoken on the vast Australian continent before their postcolonial demise, is contained in nineteenth-century grammars. Many were written by fervent young missionaries who traversed the globe intent on describing the languages spoken by heathens, whom they hoped to convert to Christianity. Some of these documents, written before Australian academic institutions expressed any interest in Aboriginal languages, are the sole relics of languages spoken by the people who successfully occupied Australia. This history of the early description of Australian Aboriginal languages traces a developing understanding and ability to describe Australian morphosyntax. The corpus of early grammatical descriptions written between 1834 and 1910 is identified in Chapter 1. Chapter 2 discusses the philological methodology of retrieving data from these grammars. Chapters 3-9 consider the grammars in roughly chronological order, commencing with those written in the earliest-established Australian colony of New South Wales: L.Threlkeld, 1834 (Chapter 3), and W.Günther, 1838 and 1840 (Chapter 4). Chapters 5-9 investigates the large body of grammars of languages spoken in South Australia: C.G.Teichelmann & C.W.Schürmann 1840 (Chapter 5), H.A.E.Meyer 1843 (Chapter 6), C.W.Schürmann 1844 and M.Moorhouse 1846 (Chapter 7), grammars of Diyari (Chapter 8,) and grammars of Arrernte (Chapter 9). Analyses made by other corpus grammarians are discussed throughout these chapters, by way of comparison, notably: C.Symmons (1841), G.Taplin (1867;1872[1870];1874;1878), W.Ridley (1875[1866;1855a];1855b;1856b), H.Livingstone (1892), W.E.Roth (1897;1901), and R.H.Mathews’ analyses of some of the many languages he described. Some material is presented as appendices. Appendix 1 examines the context in which grammars of languages spoken in New South Wales and Queensland were written. G.Taplin’s (1867;1872[1870];1874;1878) grammars of Ngarrindjeri are examined more closely in Appendix 2. By focussing on grammatical structures that challenged the classically-trained grammarians: the description of the case systems, of ergativity, and of bound pronouns, Chapters 3-9 of this historiographical investigation identify the provenance of analyses, and of descriptive techniques, thus identifying paths of intellectual descent. The extent to which missionary-grammarians, posted across far-flung regions of the country, were aware of each others’ materials has not previously been well understood. Three schools of descriptive practice are shown to have developed in the pre-academic era. The earliest, instigated by L.E Threlkeld (1834) (Chapter 3), is found to have been less influential than previously assumed (Carey 2004:264-269). Two later descriptive schools are identified, one spawned by W.E.Roth’s grammar of Pitta-Pitta (1897), and the other by Teichelmann & Schürmann (1840) in the earliest grammar of a language spoken in South Australia. The strength and duration of the school which was inspired by Teichelmann & Schürmann and which was dominated by South Australian Lutheran missionaries is further demonstrated through examination of the description of processes of clause subordination (Chapter 10). By studying the type of analyses characteristically generated when the European classical descriptive framework was applied to Australian grammatical structures, or the nature of the ‘looking glass’ through which Australian morpho-syntactic structures were observed, this thesis refines a philological methodology of extracting morphosyntactic data from antique grammatical records. ; Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Humanities, 2017.
Keyword: Arrernte; Australian Aboriginal languages; Awabakal; Barngarla; Bethesda; Diyari; Flierl; Guugu-Yimidhirr; Hermannsburg; Kaurna; Killalpaninna; language reclamation; linguistic historiography; Lutheran missionaries; missionary linguistics; Moorhouse; Neuendettelsau; Ngarrindjeri; Pama-Nyungan; Pitta-Pitta; Reuther; Roth; Schürmann; Strehlow; Taplin; Teichelmann; Threlkeld; Wiradjuri
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/105379
https://doi.org/10.4225/55/5926388950cdc
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56
The meaning of antipassive: Evidence from Australian languages
In: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics; Vol 39 (2017): Special Issue on Indigenous Languages ; 1718-3510 ; 1705-8619 (2017)
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57
Zur rekonstruktion der verbalprafixe im Amurdak ; (On reconstructing the verbal prefixes of Amurdak)
Mailhammer, Robert (R16975). - : Germany, Peniope, 2017
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58
Reconstructing remote relationships: proto-Australian noun class prefixation
Harvey, Mark; Mailhammer, Robert. - : John Benjamins Publishing, 2017
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59
Possessor dissension: agreement mismatch in Ngumpin-Yapa possessive constructions
Meakins, Felicity; Nordlinger, Rachel. - : De Gruyter Mouton, 2017
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60
A replicable acoustic measure of lenition and the nature of variability in Gurindji stops
Ennever, Thomas; Meakins, Felicity; Round, Erich. - : Walter de Gruyter, 2017
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