
The Timucua Language
Description
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This grammar is based on a thorough study of the extant printed and handwritten documents and on careful philological and comparative analysis of the corpus. Because the content of printed Timucua material often varies considerably from the Spanish text printed in parallel with it, careful study of Timucua grammar enables linguists, anthropologists, and historians to begin to read these critical texts in Florida and southeastern U.S. history.
Reviews / Votes
"This grammar of Timucua is exhaustive, and it is impressive how George Aaron Broadwell has derived the grammar from imperfectly bilingual sources. His extensive database of Timucua texts has helped him greatly in explaining the grammar of this long-extinct language isolate. He does not shy away from the difficulties inherent in working with seventeenth-century material but discusses them in detail."-Geoffrey D. Kimball, author of Koasati Grammar "Very important to the early history of Florida, this analysis of Timucua will make it possible for others to work on the language and unlock previously inaccessible materials. . . . A remarkable achievement. George Aaron Broadwell has made a thorough search of archival Spanish materials, gathered transcriptions and translations into a database, and-in a process that can be likened to decipherment-has worked out plausible interpretations of the meanings of words and affixes."-Jack B. Martin, author of A Grammar of Creek (Muskogee)More details
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Content
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Part 1. Historical background and literature overview
- Chapter 1. About the language
- 1.1 History
- 1.2 Dialectal variation
- 1.3 Previous research and genetic affiliations
- Chapter 2. The corpus and citation conventions
- Chapter 3. Interpreting the corpus
- 3.1 Documents written by native speakers
- 3.2 Pareja's Arte
- 3.3 Orthographic and lexical diversity
- Chapter 4. Grammar overview
- 4.1 Phonological typology
- 4.2 Morphological typology
- 4.3 Word order and simple verb inflection
- 4.4 Simple nouns and noun phrases
- 4.5 Simple postpositional phrases
- 4.6 More complex verb agreement
- 4.7 Linking clauses together
- 4.8 Question particles and question words
- 4.9 Typological classification
- Part 2. Phonology
- Chapter 5. Phonological inventory and orthography
- 5.1 Consonants
- 5.2 Vowels
- 5.3 Syllables
- 5.4 Words with &i&+vowel sequences
- 5.5 Distributional skewing
- 5.6 Stress
- Chapter 6. Major phonological and morphophonological processes
- 6.1 Vowel coalescence and deletion
- 6.2 Round vowel harmony in roots
- 6.3 Vowel lowering
- 6.4 Front vowel lowering
- 6.5 Voicing after nasals
- 6.6 Reduplication
- 6.7 Phonology of loanwords
- Part 3. Morphosyntax
- Chapter 7. Nouns
- 7.1 Derivational processes
- 7.2 Compounds
- 7.3 Nominal inflectional morphology
- 7.4 Lack of grammatical gender
- Chapter 8. Adjectives
- Chapter 9. Noun phrases
- 9.1 Order in noun phrases
- 9.2 Affixes attached to noun phrases
- 9.3 Prenominal determiners
- 9.4 Possession
- 9.5 Definiteness
- Chapter 10. Pronouns and other anaphoric elements
- 10.1 Personal pronouns
- 10.2 Demonstrative pronouns
- 10.3 Indefinite pronouns
- 10.4 Pro-verbs
- Chapter 11. Numbers and quantifiers
- 11.1 Quantifiers and other indicators of plurality
- 11.2 Numbers
- Chapter 12. Adverbs
- 12.1 Temporal adverbs
- 12.2 Discourse adverbs
- 12.3 Manner adverbs
- 12.4 Manner modification via reduplication
- Chapter 13. Postpositions and their equivalents
- 13.1 ofueno 'over', 'concerning', 'after'
- 13.2 beta 'oblique'
- 13.3 toro 'without'
- 13.4 emoqua 'against', 'in front of'
- 13.5 Other postposition-like words
- Chapter 14. Verbs: Morpheme order, derivation, suppletion, and incorporation
- 14.1 Verb structure and morpheme order
- 14.2 Deriving verbs
- 14.3 Verbal suppletion
- 14.4 Semiproductive derivation
- 14.5 Incorporation
- 14.6 Incorporation of verbs
- Chapter 15. Verb agreement
- 15.1 Introduction
- 15.2 Agreement with third-person arguments
- 15.3 Ergative and absolutive agreement paradigms
- 15.4 Controversial issues
- 15.5 Unresolved issues
- Chapter 16. Valency increase: Causatives and applicatives
- 16.1 Causatives
- 16.2 Applicatives
- Chapter 17. Valency reduction: Reflexives, passives, and indefinites
- 17.1 Reflexives and reciprocals
- 17.2 The passive morpheme
- 17.3 Passive clauses
- 17.4 Honorific passive
- 17.5 Indefinite subject clauses
- Chapter 18. Verbal left periphery
- 18.1 ta= 'away', 'at a distance', 'back'
- 18.2 ca= 'thus', 'in this way', 'here'
- 18.3 Honorific particle ano
- 18.4 Preverbal particles
- 18.5 Proclitics, prefixes, or particles?
- Chapter 19. Tense, aspect, and mood
- 19.1 Tense, aspect, and modality morphology
- 19.2 Modality constructions
- Chapter 20. Evidentiality, illocutionary force, and discourse status
- 20.1 Evidential -laqe
- 20.2 Declarative -la
- 20.3 Final suffix -laha 'emphatic'
- 20.4 Final suffix -lecu 'insult'
- 20.5 Final suffix -lechu
- 20.6 Final suffix -leto
- 20.7 Final suffix -leqete 'not at all'
- 20.8 Final suffix -nano
- 20.9 Final suffix -no
- 20.10 Final suffix -teo 'angry reply'
- 20.11 Counterfactual =lahayo
- 20.12 Final suffix =tiacu 'negative assertion'
- Chapter 21. Negation
- 21.1 Ordinary verbal negation
- 21.2 Negation of nonverbal predicates
- 21.3 Negative commands
- 21.4 Negative proforms and adverbs
- 21.5 Expletive negation
- Chapter 22. Light verbs
- 22.1 Quoso 'do'
- 22.2 Moso 'do'
- 22.3 Puqua 'do to many'
- 22.4 Fa 'be located'
- 22.5 Queni 'be'
- Chapter 23. Copular and existential constructions
- 23.1 Incorporating copula le
- 23.2 Existentials and possessives
- Part 4. Functional systems
- Chapter 24. Grammatical relations
- 24.1 Case marking
- 24.2 Possessor raising
- Chapter 25. Pragmatically marked structures
- 25.1 Questions
- 25.2 Imperatives
- 25.3 Exclamations
- 25.4 Other special verb constructions
- Chapter 26. Clause combinations
- 26.1 Complement clauses
- 26.2 Adverbial clauses
- 26.3 Clause chaining and switch reference
- 26.4 Discourse clitic =qere
- 26.5 Putting it all together
- 26.6 Clauses in discourse
- Chapter 27. Relative clauses
- 27.1 Tense restrictions in definite relative clauses
- 27.2 Relative clauses with no overt head
- Chapter 28. Coordination
- 28.1 Coordination of noun phrases
- 28.2 Coordination of clauses
- 28.3 The =chiqe clitic
- Appendix: Morphemes
- Notes
- References
- Index
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