The morphologies of certain Austroasiatic and Austronesian languages, and of the parent languages reconstructed for these two groups, are compared. Striking similarities of form and function are revealed in derivational affixes (including prefixes, infixes, and suffixes), as well as in particles with syntactic functions and in the pronoun systems. Similarities are also revealed in major syntactic features. Among the Austroasiatic languages, those of the Nicobar Islands appear to be most similar to Austronesian. A number of possible explanations for the facts revealed by this comparison are considered. The question is especially perplexing as to why Nicobarese morphology should appear so similar to Austronesian, while its lexicon resembles n...
Abstract Ever since Paul K. Benedict (1942, 1975) had first set out the case for Austro-Tai in deta...
The existence of nominal classification systems has long been thought of as one of the defining feat...
Although morphological innovations are usually regarded as important in reconstructing the histories...
This paper reexamines some of the claims that have been made in support of the Austric hypothesis in...
The appearance of grammatical morphemes that are identical. or at least similar in form and meaning ...
The purpose ofthis chapter is to review and evaluate the set of evidence that has so far appeared in...
The Chamorro language is an Austronesian language spoken in the Marianas Islands. Its position withi...
Seeking to reconstruct the development of case and voice marking in sim-ple transitive sentences fro...
This paper examines the Papuan languages of Island Melanesia, with a view to considering their typol...
Questions have been raised about the precise genetic affiliation of the Enggano language of the Barr...
Collins (1981) proposed evidence regarding the kinship of languages (ambelau, buru, sula and taliabo...
An understudied morphosyntactic innovation, reanalysis of the Proto-Austronesian (PAn) stative intra...
“Austric ” is a hypothetical language family proposed by Wilhelm Schmidt, a Lutheran clergyman from ...
This paper discusses historical and ongoing morphological simplification in Alorese, an Austronesi...
For speakers of Austronesian languages, there has been, for millennia, an intuitive recognition of t...
Abstract Ever since Paul K. Benedict (1942, 1975) had first set out the case for Austro-Tai in deta...
The existence of nominal classification systems has long been thought of as one of the defining feat...
Although morphological innovations are usually regarded as important in reconstructing the histories...
This paper reexamines some of the claims that have been made in support of the Austric hypothesis in...
The appearance of grammatical morphemes that are identical. or at least similar in form and meaning ...
The purpose ofthis chapter is to review and evaluate the set of evidence that has so far appeared in...
The Chamorro language is an Austronesian language spoken in the Marianas Islands. Its position withi...
Seeking to reconstruct the development of case and voice marking in sim-ple transitive sentences fro...
This paper examines the Papuan languages of Island Melanesia, with a view to considering their typol...
Questions have been raised about the precise genetic affiliation of the Enggano language of the Barr...
Collins (1981) proposed evidence regarding the kinship of languages (ambelau, buru, sula and taliabo...
An understudied morphosyntactic innovation, reanalysis of the Proto-Austronesian (PAn) stative intra...
“Austric ” is a hypothetical language family proposed by Wilhelm Schmidt, a Lutheran clergyman from ...
This paper discusses historical and ongoing morphological simplification in Alorese, an Austronesi...
For speakers of Austronesian languages, there has been, for millennia, an intuitive recognition of t...
Abstract Ever since Paul K. Benedict (1942, 1975) had first set out the case for Austro-Tai in deta...
The existence of nominal classification systems has long been thought of as one of the defining feat...
Although morphological innovations are usually regarded as important in reconstructing the histories...