International audienceOne of the quintessential typological properties of the Bantu languages is their pervasive system of noun classes and noun class agreement. This is undoubtedly the aspect of their grammatical structure that is most discussed in the literature, if only because every grammar sketch of a Bantu language contains a section on noun classes. The most complete discussion can be found in Maho (1999). In contrast, the structure of the noun phrase has received little attention, which cannot be attributed to a lack of interesting features. This chapter briefly introduces aspects of the noun and noun phrase that are well studied, such as the noun class system and the different types of adnominal modifiers, and provides them with a ...
This collection of papers is part of a broader research project on the syntax of noun phrases in Ban...
We argue that a set of facts about the plural nominal class prefixes in Southern Bantu languages sho...
Comparative studies of noun class systems in East Benue-Congo languages go back at least as far as t...
International audienceOne of the quintessential typological properties of the Bantu languages is the...
Bantu verbal forms are notoriously complex from a morphological point of view, in that they consist ...
Studies of the noun in Bantu languages have traditionally concentrated on the morphology of the noun...
This dissertation studies Bantu nominalizations drawing evidence primarily from Gikuyu and Bantu lan...
In general Bantu languages have a head-before-dependent (HD) basic word order, leaving aside some ex...
This study is a description of the word order variation in the noun phrases of Kivunjo, a Bantu lang...
This collection of papers is part of a broader research project on the syntax of noun phrases in Ban...
Investigations into phonological differences between nouns and verbs focus almost exclusively on the...
M.A. (African Languages)Zulu, like many other African languages, is characterized by a system of nou...
It is characterized by the categorization of nouns into noun classes which often pair into singular ...
In this paper we offer a first systematic account of the noun class system of Ngwi, a West-Coastal B...
Noun classes are a prominent grammatical feature of Bantu languages where typically each noun (or no...
This collection of papers is part of a broader research project on the syntax of noun phrases in Ban...
We argue that a set of facts about the plural nominal class prefixes in Southern Bantu languages sho...
Comparative studies of noun class systems in East Benue-Congo languages go back at least as far as t...
International audienceOne of the quintessential typological properties of the Bantu languages is the...
Bantu verbal forms are notoriously complex from a morphological point of view, in that they consist ...
Studies of the noun in Bantu languages have traditionally concentrated on the morphology of the noun...
This dissertation studies Bantu nominalizations drawing evidence primarily from Gikuyu and Bantu lan...
In general Bantu languages have a head-before-dependent (HD) basic word order, leaving aside some ex...
This study is a description of the word order variation in the noun phrases of Kivunjo, a Bantu lang...
This collection of papers is part of a broader research project on the syntax of noun phrases in Ban...
Investigations into phonological differences between nouns and verbs focus almost exclusively on the...
M.A. (African Languages)Zulu, like many other African languages, is characterized by a system of nou...
It is characterized by the categorization of nouns into noun classes which often pair into singular ...
In this paper we offer a first systematic account of the noun class system of Ngwi, a West-Coastal B...
Noun classes are a prominent grammatical feature of Bantu languages where typically each noun (or no...
This collection of papers is part of a broader research project on the syntax of noun phrases in Ban...
We argue that a set of facts about the plural nominal class prefixes in Southern Bantu languages sho...
Comparative studies of noun class systems in East Benue-Congo languages go back at least as far as t...