Fr. 86.00

Zhoutun

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book presents a description of the grammar of Zhoutun, an endangered Sinitic variety spoken by less than 1000 people in the Qinghai Province of northwest China. With vocabulary predominantly from Chinese and Tibetan syntax, Zhoutun is one of the Sinitic varieties most distant from Standard Chinese, with unexpected typological features like, for example, case markers, rigid SOV word order, simplified tonal system, negative copula as a disjunctive coordinator and "locutor-referential pronoun" which is not found in Chinese and in many languages.
Zhoutun is also a representative variety of the Gansu-Qinghai linguistic area in which Mongolic and Turkic languages coexist with Tibetan and Chinese dialects from a long time. This book also describes the sociolinguistic and sociohistorical contexts of Zhoutun.
It should be of interest to specialists and students of language contact, linguistic typology, Chinese dialectology, language geography, anthropological linguistics, sociolinguistics, folklore studies, and preservation of endangered languages.

List of contents

Contents

Dedication
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Phonology
Chapter 3: Nouns and noun phrases
3.1 Definition
3.2 Word formation
3.2.1 Affixation
3.2.2 Reduplication
3.2.3 Compounding
3.3 Number
3.3.1 =m
3.3.2 =li
3.4 Case relations
3.4.1 Dative-accusative =xa/=a
3.4.2 Comitative-instrumental =laÞ
3.4.3 Ablative =tha
3.4.4 Locative =li and =x Þ
3.4.5 Genitive =t
3.4.6 Comparative khaÞ
3.5 Referentiality
3.5.1 Generic
3.5.2 Individual
Chapter 4: Verbs and verb phrases
4.1 Definition
4.2 Aspect
4.2.1 Perfective
4.2.2 Future
4.2.3 Ingressive
4.2.4 Progressive
4.2.5 Resultative
4.2.6 Experiential
4.2.7 The expression of tense
4.3 Modality
4.3.1 Dynamic modality
4.3.2 Epistemic modality
4.3.3 Deontic modality
4.3.4 Evidentiality
4.3.5 Negation
4.4 Serial verb construction
4.5 Verb-complement constructions
4.5.1 Verb-direction constructions
4.5.2 Verb-result construction
4.5.3 Verb-degree construction
4.6 Valance changing
4.7 Possession and Existence
Chapter 5: Adjectives and adverbs
5.1 Adjectives
5.1.1 Identify adjectives and verbs
5.1.2 Adjectives as modifiers
5.1.3 Adjectives as predicates
5.2 Adverbs
5.2.1 Position
5.2.2 Some common adverbs
5.2.3 Reduplication
Chapter 6: Minor word classes
6.1 Pronoun
6.1.1 First person
6.1.2 Second person
6.1.3 Third person
6.1.4 Reflexive
6.1.5 Locutor-referential
6.2 Demonstratives
6.2.1 The system
6.2.2 Animate and inanimate referents
6.2.3 Location referents
6.2.4 Manner and degree
6.3 Interrogative words
6.3.1 tu -words
6.3.2 a- words
6.3.3 -m words
6.3.4 Others
6.4 Numerals
6.4.1 Cardinal and ordinal numerals
6.4.2 Fractional numerals
6.5 Classifiers
6.5.1 Nominal classifiers
6.5.2 Verbal classifiers
6.5.3 The position of Num+CL and noun
6.6 Final particles
6.6.1 ti
6.6.2 pa
6.6.3 li
6.6.4 xu Þ
6.6.5 k
6.6.6 ta
6.6.7 ia
6.6.8 m
6.6.9 p
6.6.10 sa
6.6.11 Summary
6.7 Adpositions
6.7.1 Prepositions
6.7.2 Postpositions
6.8 Coordinators
6.8.1 Conjunctive coordinator
6.8.2 Disjunctive coordinators
Chapter 7: Clause structure
7.1 Word order
7.2 Ditransitive construction
7.3 Copula clause
7.4 Comparative clause
7.4.1 Comparative construction
7.4.2 Comparative construction of equality
7.4.3 Superlative construction
7.5 Imperative clause
7.5.1 The form of imperative clauses
7.5.2 The negation of imperative clause
7.6 Interrogative clause
7.6.1 Yes-no question
7.6.2 Wh-question
7.6.3 Alternative question
7.6.4 Tag question
7.7 Subordinate clause
7.7.1 Relative clause
7.7.2 Complement clause
7.7.3 Adverbial clause
7.8 Topic structure
References
Appendix
I. Narrative: The past life in Zhoutun
II. List of abbreviations

Summary

This book presents a description of the grammar of Zhoutun, an endangered Sinitic variety spoken by less than 1000 people in the Qinghai Province of northwest China. With vocabulary predominantly from Chinese and Tibetan syntax, Zhoutun is one of the Sinitic varieties most distant from Standard Chinese, with unexpected typological features like, for example, case markers, rigid SOV word order, simplified tonal system, negative copula as a disjunctive coordinator and "locutor-referential pronoun" which is not found in Chinese and in many languages.
Zhoutun is also a representative variety of the Gansu-Qinghai linguistic area in which Mongolic and Turkic languages coexist with Tibetan and Chinese dialects from a long time. This book also describes the sociolinguistic and sociohistorical contexts of Zhoutun.
It should be of interest to specialists and students of language contact, linguistic typology, Chinese dialectology, language geography, anthropological linguistics, sociolinguistics, folklore studies, and preservation of endangered languages.

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