This paper is a new investigation into the lexical distinction between the parts of speech, noun and verb, in two Oceanic languages, Tolai and Whitesands. It addresses crucial problems about what criteria can be used to define them and their associated syntactic structures. One problem in both languages is their typical Oceanic behaviour in regards to inalienable nouns. There exists an object-denoting root class, prototypically members of the noun class in non-Austronesian that have obligatory argument assignment. This phenomenon is problematic in many theoretical accounts of the noun/verb distinction, which argue that nouns contrast with verbs in not assigning argument structure. The approach proposed here claims the noun/verb contrast wit...
International audienceNominalized constructions are a very frequent phenomenon in Oceanic languages,...
We discuss the results of a video vignettes experiment that uncovers the variation of noun-classifie...
This dissertation presents a general analysis of noun phrase (NP) structures in Australian languages...
Whitesands is an under-described language of southern Vanuatu, and this thesis presents Whitesands-s...
This paper examines three properties of the Reefs-Santa Cruz language Aiwoo that are unusual for an ...
peer reviewedThis book presents a first comprehensive typological analysis of noun phrases in Austra...
This paper discusses the analysis of a particular class of morphemes in the Oceanic language Äiwoo, ...
This is based on an excerpt from Hammond, J (2010), The grammar of nouns and verbs in Whitesands, a ...
This monograph is not only the first comprehensive grammar of Papapana (a previously undocumented an...
peer reviewedThis chapter discusses word classes in Australian languages, covering the large Pama-Ny...
Although most Oceanic languages have an unmarked subject-verb-object word order, the Papuan Tip Clus...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)This thesis is a grammatical description of the Nese ...
This chapter provides a lexical-semantic comparison of a selection of Englishes and English-related ...
Whitesands is an under-described Oceanic language belonging to the Southern Vanuatu sub-family. Like...
Whitesands is an under-described Oceanic language belonging to the Southern Vanuatu sub-family. Like...
International audienceNominalized constructions are a very frequent phenomenon in Oceanic languages,...
We discuss the results of a video vignettes experiment that uncovers the variation of noun-classifie...
This dissertation presents a general analysis of noun phrase (NP) structures in Australian languages...
Whitesands is an under-described language of southern Vanuatu, and this thesis presents Whitesands-s...
This paper examines three properties of the Reefs-Santa Cruz language Aiwoo that are unusual for an ...
peer reviewedThis book presents a first comprehensive typological analysis of noun phrases in Austra...
This paper discusses the analysis of a particular class of morphemes in the Oceanic language Äiwoo, ...
This is based on an excerpt from Hammond, J (2010), The grammar of nouns and verbs in Whitesands, a ...
This monograph is not only the first comprehensive grammar of Papapana (a previously undocumented an...
peer reviewedThis chapter discusses word classes in Australian languages, covering the large Pama-Ny...
Although most Oceanic languages have an unmarked subject-verb-object word order, the Papuan Tip Clus...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)This thesis is a grammatical description of the Nese ...
This chapter provides a lexical-semantic comparison of a selection of Englishes and English-related ...
Whitesands is an under-described Oceanic language belonging to the Southern Vanuatu sub-family. Like...
Whitesands is an under-described Oceanic language belonging to the Southern Vanuatu sub-family. Like...
International audienceNominalized constructions are a very frequent phenomenon in Oceanic languages,...
We discuss the results of a video vignettes experiment that uncovers the variation of noun-classifie...
This dissertation presents a general analysis of noun phrase (NP) structures in Australian languages...