This study analyses the structure of lexical roots in the Lamalamic languages of Cape York Peninsula, in the northeast of Australia. The analysis shows how Lamalamic roots are shaped diachronically by processes of erosion and expansion, leading to root forms that are unusual by Australian standards. Erosion processes include the loss of initial consonants, resulting in vowel-initial roots, and the loss of entire initial syllables, resulting in monosyllabic roots. Expansion processes include leftward expansion through the addition of meaningless VC prefixes, and rightward expansion through morphological augmentation and subsequent semantic bleaching. The analysis describes the basic processes involved for the languages, using historical-comp...
Northern Paamese and Southeast Ambrym, two languages of Central Vanuatu, share a set of sound change...
This volume consists of studies of the relationship between areal diffusion and the genetic developm...
© 2020 Brigitte Louise AgnewMangarla is a Pama-Nyungan language of the Marrngu subgroup, originally ...
This study analyses the structure of lexical roots in the Lamalamic languages of Cape York Peninsula...
This paper investigates the genetic status of Lamalamic, a grouping of Lamalama, Umbuygamu, and Rima...
This paper investigates the genetic status of Lamalamic, a grouping of Lamalama, Umbuygamu, and Rima...
Indigenous Languages of Australia (ILA) provided a significant number of words that can befound in S...
It remains a mystery how Pama–Nyungan, the world’s largest hunter-gatherer language family, came to ...
This thesis examines retraction and pharyngealization processes in Lillooet, an Interior Salish lang...
Australian linguistic prehistory has lagged behind equivalent endeavours on other continents in part...
Australian linguistic prehistory has lagged behind equivalent endeavours on other continents in part...
Mbarrumbathama is a clan-named variety of Lamalama, a language of Cape York Peninsula, in the northe...
© 2007 Amos TeoIn my thesis, I begin to unravel morphological complexity in Iwaidja and Maung, two l...
"The Mirndi language family is one of the very few discontinuous language families that have been pr...
Functional load (FL) quantifies the contributions by phonological contrasts to distinctions made acr...
Northern Paamese and Southeast Ambrym, two languages of Central Vanuatu, share a set of sound change...
This volume consists of studies of the relationship between areal diffusion and the genetic developm...
© 2020 Brigitte Louise AgnewMangarla is a Pama-Nyungan language of the Marrngu subgroup, originally ...
This study analyses the structure of lexical roots in the Lamalamic languages of Cape York Peninsula...
This paper investigates the genetic status of Lamalamic, a grouping of Lamalama, Umbuygamu, and Rima...
This paper investigates the genetic status of Lamalamic, a grouping of Lamalama, Umbuygamu, and Rima...
Indigenous Languages of Australia (ILA) provided a significant number of words that can befound in S...
It remains a mystery how Pama–Nyungan, the world’s largest hunter-gatherer language family, came to ...
This thesis examines retraction and pharyngealization processes in Lillooet, an Interior Salish lang...
Australian linguistic prehistory has lagged behind equivalent endeavours on other continents in part...
Australian linguistic prehistory has lagged behind equivalent endeavours on other continents in part...
Mbarrumbathama is a clan-named variety of Lamalama, a language of Cape York Peninsula, in the northe...
© 2007 Amos TeoIn my thesis, I begin to unravel morphological complexity in Iwaidja and Maung, two l...
"The Mirndi language family is one of the very few discontinuous language families that have been pr...
Functional load (FL) quantifies the contributions by phonological contrasts to distinctions made acr...
Northern Paamese and Southeast Ambrym, two languages of Central Vanuatu, share a set of sound change...
This volume consists of studies of the relationship between areal diffusion and the genetic developm...
© 2020 Brigitte Louise AgnewMangarla is a Pama-Nyungan language of the Marrngu subgroup, originally ...