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Synchronic and Diachronic Aspects of Kanashi (Hardcover)
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Synchronic and Diachronic Aspects of Kanashi (Hardcover)
Series: Trends in Linguistics. Documentation [TiLDOC]
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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Kanashi, a Sino-Tibetan (ST) language belonging to the West
Himalayish (WH) subbranch of this language family, is spoken in one
single village (Malana in Kullu district, Himachal Pradesh state,
India), which is surrounded by villages where - entirely unrelated
- Indo-Aryan (IA) languages are spoken. Until we started working on
Kanashi, very little linguistic material was available. Researchers
have long speculated about the prehistory of Kanashi: how did it
happen that it ended up spoken in one single village, completely
cut off from its closest linguistic relatives? Even though
suggestions have been made of a close genealogical relation between
Kanashi and Kinnauri (another WH language), at present separated by
over 200 km of rugged mountainous terrain, their shared linguistic
features have not been discussed in the literature. Based on
primary fieldwork, this volume presents some synchronic and
diachronic aspects of Kanashi. The synchronic description of
Kanashi includes a general introduction on Malana and the Kanashi
language community (chapter 1), linguistic descriptions of its
sound system (chapter 2), of phonological variation in Kanashi
(chapter 4), of its grammar (chapter 3) and of its intriguing
numeral systems (chapter 5), as well as basic vocabulary lists
(Kanashi-English, English-Kanashi) (chapter 9). As for the
diachronic and genealogical aspects (chapters 6-8), we compare and
contrast Kanashi with other ST languages of this region (in
particular languages of Kinnaur, notably Kinnauri), thereby
uncovering some intriguing linguistic features common to Kanashi
and Kinnauri which provide insights into their common history. For
instance: a subset of borrowed IA nouns and adjectives in both
languages end in -(a)n or -(a)s, elements which do not otherwise
appear in Kanashi or Kinnauri, nor in the IA donor languages
(chapter 6); and both languages have a valency changing mechanism
where the valency increasing marker -ja alternates with the
intransitive marker -e(d) in borrowed IA verbs (again: elements
without an obvious provenance in the donor or recipient language)
(chapter 7). These features are neither found in IA languages nor
in the WH languages geographically closest to Kanashi (Pattani,
Bunan, Tinani), but only in Kinnauri, which is spoken further away.
Intriguingly, traces of some of these features are also found in
some ST languages belonging to different ST subgroups (both WH and
non-WH), spoken in Uttarakhand in India and in western Nepal (e.g.
Rongpo, Chaudangsi, Raji and Raute). This raises fundamental
questions regarding genealogical classification, language contact
and prehistory of the WH group of languages and of this part of the
Indian Himalayas, which are also discussed in the volume (chapter
8).
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