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Quotative Indexes in African Languages - A Synchronic and Diachronic Survey (Hardcover)
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Quotative Indexes in African Languages - A Synchronic and Diachronic Survey (Hardcover)
Series: Empirical Approaches to Language Typology [EALT]
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The book represents the results of a synchronic and diachronic
cross-African survey of quotative indexes. These are linguistic
expressions that signal in the ongoing discourse the presence of a
quote (often called "direct reported speech"). For this purpose, 39
African languages were selected to represent the genealogical and
geographical diversity of the continent. The study is based
primarily on this language sample, in particular on the analysis of
quotative indexes and related expressions from a text corpus of
each sample language, but also includes a wide range of data from
the published literature on other African as well as non- African
languages. It is the first typological investigation of direct
reported discourse of this magnitude in a large group of languages.
The book may thus serve as a starting point of similar studies in
other geographical areas or even with a global scope, as well as
stimulate more detailed investigations of particular languages. The
results of the African survey challenge several prevailing
cross-linguistic generalizations regarding quotative indexes and
reported discourse constructions as a whole, of which two are of
particular interest. In the syntactic domain, where reported
discourse has mostly been dealt with under so- called sentential
complementation, the study supports the minority view that direct
reported discourse and also a large portion of indirect reported
discourse show hardly any evidence for the claim that the reported
clause is a syntactic object complement of some matrix verb. With
respect to grammaticalization, the work concludes that speech verbs
are, against common belief, not a frequent source of quotatives,
complementizers, and other related markers. Far more frequent
sources are markers of similarity and manner; generic verbs of
equation, inchoativity, and action; and pronominals referring to
the quote or the speaker. Another more general conclusion of the
study is that especially direct reported discourse can be
fruitfully analyzed as part of a larger linguistic domain called
"mimesis". This comprises expressions which represent a state of
affairs by means of enactment/ performance rather than with the
help of "canonical" linguistic signs and includes, besides reported
discourse, world-referring bodily gestures, ideophone-like signs,
and non-linguistic sound.
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