The use of multiple words to describe nouns is a common phenomenon in language and languages that have adjectives employ this word class.Ga, a Kwa language of the Niger Congo, branch is no exception, whereas languages without adjectives may use other lexical categories like nouns and verbs which play the adjectival role. Ga has adjectives and employs them as attributives for nouns. The paper examines the syntactic rule governing the occurence of several adjectives serving as attibtutes of a single head noun. In this paper the noun is considered as the head of the Ga Nominal Phrase. The order of these adjectives has not received scholarly attention in Ga and this is to fill that gap in the literature. I argued that the order of adjectives is...
Likpakpaln is a little-described Mabia (Gur) language of northern Ghana. Drawing on primary data, th...
This study compares the complexity of the noun phrase (NP) in Ghanaian English in a real-time perspe...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
When multiple adjectival modifiers occur in the English Noun phrase, speakers of the language have a...
The adjective category normally serves as attribute for the nouns in languages that do have them. Th...
This paper discusses the structure of Noun Phrase (NP) in Safaliba, a Gur language spoken in norther...
This study is a description of the word order variation in the noun phrases of Kivunjo, a Bantu lang...
In this paper, I investigate the nature of complex nominal modification in Northern Sotho, a Souther...
This paper offers a description of the nominal class system in Esahie (CentralTano, Kwa, Niger-Congo...
Real adjectives are few in Niger-Congo languages. Welmers [1973] warns that we should be suspicious ...
The report deals with descriptive multiword adjectives in the context of English to Swahili machine ...
This paper investigates NP internal adjective order in Zulu. I conducted the fieldwork with a native...
This paper focuses on some properties of agreement inside the Noun Phrase, especially in what conce...
This study is concerned with the different properties of Hausa attributive adjectives and other noun...
An endeavor to establish typical lexical categories in individual languages as well as a typology of...
Likpakpaln is a little-described Mabia (Gur) language of northern Ghana. Drawing on primary data, th...
This study compares the complexity of the noun phrase (NP) in Ghanaian English in a real-time perspe...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
When multiple adjectival modifiers occur in the English Noun phrase, speakers of the language have a...
The adjective category normally serves as attribute for the nouns in languages that do have them. Th...
This paper discusses the structure of Noun Phrase (NP) in Safaliba, a Gur language spoken in norther...
This study is a description of the word order variation in the noun phrases of Kivunjo, a Bantu lang...
In this paper, I investigate the nature of complex nominal modification in Northern Sotho, a Souther...
This paper offers a description of the nominal class system in Esahie (CentralTano, Kwa, Niger-Congo...
Real adjectives are few in Niger-Congo languages. Welmers [1973] warns that we should be suspicious ...
The report deals with descriptive multiword adjectives in the context of English to Swahili machine ...
This paper investigates NP internal adjective order in Zulu. I conducted the fieldwork with a native...
This paper focuses on some properties of agreement inside the Noun Phrase, especially in what conce...
This study is concerned with the different properties of Hausa attributive adjectives and other noun...
An endeavor to establish typical lexical categories in individual languages as well as a typology of...
Likpakpaln is a little-described Mabia (Gur) language of northern Ghana. Drawing on primary data, th...
This study compares the complexity of the noun phrase (NP) in Ghanaian English in a real-time perspe...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...