Constructions with the subject following the verb are a widely studied topic in Bantu linguistics. One such construction, in which the subject is dislocated, is considered not as core subject inversion, but generally as an afterthought construction. This study takes a spoken text, in this case a narrative, as its point of departure to examine this kind of construction more carefully in terms of its function and morphosyntactic structure in Xhosa, a Bantu language of South Africa. The paper shows that such agreeing post-verbal subject constructions are used to re-activate semi-active concepts that have been mentioned previously in the narrative. They reintroduce a concept which then becomes the topic of the current sentence and of subsequent...
A handout of a presentation given at the Afranaph Project Development Workshop on December 11, 2010,...
Although the areas I intend to investigate are rather diverse, what unites them is a concern for the...
This chapter concentrates on the canonical position of lexical subjects in Proto-Bantu non-subject r...
Locative inversion construction in Setswana, as in other Bantu languages, defies straightforward ana...
This study charts variation in subject inversion constructions in Bantu languages. It distinguishes ...
Locative inversion construction in Setswana, as in other Bantu languages, defies straightforward ana...
Inversion constructions in Bantu have been discussed from a variety of perspectives over the last de...
Bantu inversion constructions include locative inversion, patient inversion (also called subject–obj...
Inversion structures, in which the logical subject appears in postverbal position, are a wide-spread...
Inversion constructions in Bantu have been discussed from a variety of perspectives over the last de...
Relativisation of a non-subject NP in ciNsenga (Bantu) results in the inversion of the subject nd th...
Subject inversion in Bantu non-subject relative clauses has been attributed to the form and the pros...
A prominent feature of Bantu languages is the existence of so-called "inversion " construc...
Locative inversion has often been treated as an unaccusativity phenomenon in languages as typologica...
Locative subject alternation constructions show variation within and across languages in terms of su...
A handout of a presentation given at the Afranaph Project Development Workshop on December 11, 2010,...
Although the areas I intend to investigate are rather diverse, what unites them is a concern for the...
This chapter concentrates on the canonical position of lexical subjects in Proto-Bantu non-subject r...
Locative inversion construction in Setswana, as in other Bantu languages, defies straightforward ana...
This study charts variation in subject inversion constructions in Bantu languages. It distinguishes ...
Locative inversion construction in Setswana, as in other Bantu languages, defies straightforward ana...
Inversion constructions in Bantu have been discussed from a variety of perspectives over the last de...
Bantu inversion constructions include locative inversion, patient inversion (also called subject–obj...
Inversion structures, in which the logical subject appears in postverbal position, are a wide-spread...
Inversion constructions in Bantu have been discussed from a variety of perspectives over the last de...
Relativisation of a non-subject NP in ciNsenga (Bantu) results in the inversion of the subject nd th...
Subject inversion in Bantu non-subject relative clauses has been attributed to the form and the pros...
A prominent feature of Bantu languages is the existence of so-called "inversion " construc...
Locative inversion has often been treated as an unaccusativity phenomenon in languages as typologica...
Locative subject alternation constructions show variation within and across languages in terms of su...
A handout of a presentation given at the Afranaph Project Development Workshop on December 11, 2010,...
Although the areas I intend to investigate are rather diverse, what unites them is a concern for the...
This chapter concentrates on the canonical position of lexical subjects in Proto-Bantu non-subject r...