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A view from the North: genders and classifiers in Arawak languages of north-west Amazonia
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4 |
Classifiers in Hmong
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Abstract:
Building on research done by Riddle (1989) and Bisang (1993), inter alia, this chapter seeks to provide a more thorough account of the classifier system of the two varieties of Laotian Hmong (Hmong-Mien, Laos and diaspora), White Hmong and Green Mong. In Hmong, classifiers are an open class, belonging to one of six semantic varieties, including locational. While most classifiers function as multiple classifiers, covering the roles of noun classifier, numeral classifier, possessed classifier, and deictic classifier, some individual classifiers may permit only a subset of these. Classifiers not only serve multiple functions related to syntax and discourse, including to indicate emphasis, selection of a subgroup, and apportioning of objects, but also participate in four-syllable elaborate expressions subject to specific rules, as well as display distinct behaviour in certain narrative contexts that represent special exceptions to Bisang’s (1993) hierarchy of definiteness for Hmong.
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URL: https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/60954/1/Classifiers_in_Hmong.pdf
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9 |
Documenting ritual songs: Best practices for preserving the ambiguity of Alto Perené (Arawak) shamanic pantsantsi ‘singing’
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10 |
Documenting ritual songs: Best practices for preserving the ambiguity of Alto Perené (Arawak) shamanic pantsantsi ‘singing’
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11 |
International functions of lip funneling gesture: a case study of Northern Kampa Arawaks of Peru
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19 |
Contrastive focus-marking and nominalization in Northern Kampa (Arawak) of Peru
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20 |
Language-specific resources in talk: a study of epistemic stance coding in Alto Perene (Arawak) agreements
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