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A view from the North: genders and classifiers in Arawak languages of north-west Amazonia
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28 |
Noun categorization devices: a cross-linguistic perspective
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31 |
Bridging linkage in Tariana, an Arawak language from Northwest Amazonia
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34 |
Hidden from women's ears: gender-based taboos in the Vaupés area
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35 |
Creativity in language: secret codes, special styles and linguistic taboo
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36 |
The legacy of youth: the seeds of change and the diversity of voices in Papua New Guinea
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37 |
Evidentiality and its relations with other verbal categories
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Abstract:
[Extract] EVIDENTIALITY, like all linguistic categories, is quite diverse and comes in many different formal and functional guises that pose challenges for its analysis. However, the majority of approaches agree on two points that will form the basis for this chapter: (i) semantically, evi¬dentiality states the information source, and (ii) formally, it is a grammatical category in a great number of languages (De Haan 1999; Aikhenvald 2004a: 3; Plungian 2010: 17; Brugman and Macaulay 2015). I follow the commonly assumed subdivisions within the realm of evi¬dentiality: direct versus indirect and further subdivisions of direct evidentiality into visual and other sensory evidence, and indirect into inferred versus hearsay (Willett 1988; Faller 2002: 90; Plungian 2010 ).
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URL: https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52328/1/52328_Forker_2018.pdf
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38 |
'Me', 'us', and 'others': expressing the self in Arawak languages of South America, with a focus on Tariana
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Areal diffusion and the limits of grammaticalization: an Amazonian perspective
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