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Auteur
Avelino Corral Esteban works as a Senior Lecturer in Linguistics at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain, where he teaches courses on syntax, historical linguistics, and information structure. His main areas of research cover the interaction between syntax, semantics, and pragmatics across languages, with a focus on Native American, Romance, Germanic, and Celtic languages. He has collaborated in research projects funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, the Arts and Humanities Research Council in the UK, and the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival in the USA, and he co-leads the Honóxease Project, the aim of which is to foster the preservation and revitalization of the Cheyenne language. He also received the Phillips Fund grant for Native American Research and the Benjamin Franklin grant from the American Philosophical Society. He is the author of seven book chapters, published by Cambridge University Press, De Gruyter, John Benjamins, Peter Lang, and Routledge, and more than 20 research articles, which have appeared in major linguistics journals (Acta Linguistica Academica, Journal of Language Contact, Journal of Language and Intercultural Communication, RESLA, WORD, and Zeitschrift für Romanische Philologie).
Texte du rabat
Cheyenne provides a detailed description of Cheyenne syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, notably on its nominal and verbal system and in both simple and complex sentences.
Contenu
Cheyenne flag
Preface
List of tables
List of figures
List of abbreviations
1 Introduction
1.1 Background information
1.2 Overview of Cheyenne
1.2.1 Sociolinguistic information
1.2.2 Genealogical position
1.2.3 Basic points on the phonology of Cheyenne
1.2.4 Spelling system
1.3 Basic morphosyntactic properties of Cheyenne
1.3.1 Polsynthetic morphology
1.3.2 Morphosyntactic alignment
1.3.3 Information structure
1.3.4 The verbal complex
1.3.5 Grammatical categories
1.3.6 Lexical categories
1.3.7. Morphosyntactic coding of arguments
Notes
2 RRG and Cheyenne simple sentences
2.1 The syntactic representation of a sentence
2.2 The semantic representation of a sentence
2.3 Information structure
2.4 The linking algorithm
Notes
3 Clause linkage theory
3.1 Theoretical approaches to the study of complex sentences
3.2 The RRG approach to the study of the structure of complex sentences
Notes
4 Juncture-nexus combinations
4.1 Nuclear junctures
4.2 Core junctures
4.3 Clausal junctures
4.4 Sentential junctures
Notes
5 Semantic relations between units
5.1 Single actions
5.1.1 Causative [1]
5.1.2 Modifying sub-actions
5.1.3 Phase
5.2 Multiple actions
5.2.1 Simultaneous
5.2.2 Sequential
5.2.3 Causative [2]
5.3 Endeavour
5.3.1 Attempt
5.3.2 Success
5.3.3 Failure
5.4 Intentions
5.4.1 Refusal
5.4.2 Psych-action
5.4.3 Purposive
5.5 Bringing about
5.5.1 Causative [3]
5.5.2 Jussive
5.5.3 Permissive
5.5.4 Injunctive
5.6 Perception
5.6.1 Direct perception
5.6.2 Indirect perception
5.7 Intentionality
5.7.1 Propositional attitude
5.7.2 Cognition
5.7.3 Emotion
5.8 Speech
5.8.1 Indirect discourse
5.8.2 Direct discourse
5.9 Locational
5.9.1 Space
5.9.2 Time
5.10 Circumstances
5.10.1 Reason
5.10.2 Conditional
5.10.3 Concessive
5.11 Temporality
5.11.1 Temporal / Simultaneous actions
5.11.2 Temporal / Sequential actions
5.11.3 Situation-situation / temporally unordered SoAs
5.12 Complex RPs
Notes
6 Relationship between clause linkage types and semantic relations
6.1 Intereclausal relations hierarchy
6.2 Iconic correlation between syntactic and semantic representations
Notes
7 The role of discourse-pragmatics in complex sentences
7.1 Information structure in complex sentences
7.2 Obviation in Cheyenne narration
Notes
8 Concluding remarks
Glossary of RRG terms
References
Appendix
Index