In this paper, we will attempt to reconstruct the features of Proto-Austronesian morphology and syntax which gave rise to the focus systems exhibited by modern Philippine languages. In order to approach this problem, it will be necessary to consider the following questions: 1) What is the grammatical structure of sentences showing ‘verbal focus’ in Philippine languages? And in particular, what is their synchronic and diachronic relation to nominalizations which show affixes cognate with the verbal focus affixes? We need to have a reasonably clear idea of the endpoint of an evolutionary sequence before we can reconstruct the stages that led up to it. 2) Do the focus systems of Philippine languages represent a retention from Proto-Austronesia...
The verbal morphology of Philippine languages, typically complex, usually includes distinctions of v...
The morphologies of certain Austroasiatic and Austronesian languages, and of the parent languages re...
We demonstrate that clause-final particles in Eastern Cham (Austronesian: Vietnam) are right-branchi...
The present paper attempts to account for the evolution of Western Austronesian focus constructions ...
Information structure is tied up closely with predication in predicate-initial Philippine-type langu...
Grammatical relations – in particular the relation 'subject of' – and voice are of central concern t...
This paper focuses on the morphosyntactic features of some Borneo languages spoken in East Kalimanta...
The discourse pragmatics of the focus systems of Seediq and Tsou, two Formosan languages spoken in t...
This paper is a brief statement of the typological characteristics of the syntactic structures of Ph...
Seeking to reconstruct the development of case and voice marking in sim-ple transitive sentences fro...
Although morphological innovations are usually regarded as important in reconstructing the histories...
In the last two decades Philippine languages, and of these especially Tagalog, have acquired a promi...
Starosta (2001) first observed that it is very rare to find a verb in Western Austronesian languages...
The appearance of grammatical morphemes that are identical. or at least similar in form and meaning ...
This paper discusses historical and ongoing morphological simplification in Alorese, an Austronesi...
The verbal morphology of Philippine languages, typically complex, usually includes distinctions of v...
The morphologies of certain Austroasiatic and Austronesian languages, and of the parent languages re...
We demonstrate that clause-final particles in Eastern Cham (Austronesian: Vietnam) are right-branchi...
The present paper attempts to account for the evolution of Western Austronesian focus constructions ...
Information structure is tied up closely with predication in predicate-initial Philippine-type langu...
Grammatical relations – in particular the relation 'subject of' – and voice are of central concern t...
This paper focuses on the morphosyntactic features of some Borneo languages spoken in East Kalimanta...
The discourse pragmatics of the focus systems of Seediq and Tsou, two Formosan languages spoken in t...
This paper is a brief statement of the typological characteristics of the syntactic structures of Ph...
Seeking to reconstruct the development of case and voice marking in sim-ple transitive sentences fro...
Although morphological innovations are usually regarded as important in reconstructing the histories...
In the last two decades Philippine languages, and of these especially Tagalog, have acquired a promi...
Starosta (2001) first observed that it is very rare to find a verb in Western Austronesian languages...
The appearance of grammatical morphemes that are identical. or at least similar in form and meaning ...
This paper discusses historical and ongoing morphological simplification in Alorese, an Austronesi...
The verbal morphology of Philippine languages, typically complex, usually includes distinctions of v...
The morphologies of certain Austroasiatic and Austronesian languages, and of the parent languages re...
We demonstrate that clause-final particles in Eastern Cham (Austronesian: Vietnam) are right-branchi...