This thesis explores the properties of adjectives and adverbs in Inuit (Eskimo-Aleut), with focus on the Inuktitut dialect group. While the literature on Eskimoan languages has claimed that they lack these categories, I present syntactic evidence for two classes of adjectives, one verb-like and another strictly attributive, as well as a class of adverbs. These categories are then employed to diagnose more general properties of the language including headedness, word-formation, adjunct licensing, and semantic composition. In the first half of Chapter 2 I demonstrate that verb-like adjectives can be differentiated from verbs insofar as only the former are compatible with a particular copular construction involving modals. Similarly, verb-lik...
An investigation of the first language acquisition of productive nouns in Inuktitut (Inupiaq) is pre...
International audiencePolysynthesis in Inuit appears at both lexical and sentence levels. The analys...
Typologically speaking, Inuit language (Eskaleut family) is notoriously polysynthetic both at the le...
This thesis explores the properties of adjectives and adverbs in Inuit (Eskimo-Aleut), with focus on...
This dissertation is a reference grammar of the Malimiut Coastal dialect of Inupiaq (ISO: ESI, ESK, ...
In the following I will discuss grammatical structures of Inuktitut, an Eskimo language spoken in th...
This paper discusses the relationship between the morphological structure of language and its syntac...
Semantics of Noun-Incorporating Affixes in the Inuit Language (East Greenland) In the Inuit language...
This dissertation is a description of a dialect of Eskimo, Inuktitut, spoken in the Inuit community ...
International audienceThe so-called "ergative", "absolutive" and "antipassive" constructions are her...
This paper examines some seemingly disparate uses of the morpheme -si in two very closely related In...
This dissertation is a description of a dialect of Eskimo, Inuktitut, spoken in the Inuit community ...
International audienceThe so-called "ergative", "absolutive" and "antipassive" constructions are her...
The goal of this paper is to provide a minimalist account of the morphology of Inuit languages (part...
International audiencePolysynthesis in Inuit appears at both lexical and sentence levels. The analys...
An investigation of the first language acquisition of productive nouns in Inuktitut (Inupiaq) is pre...
International audiencePolysynthesis in Inuit appears at both lexical and sentence levels. The analys...
Typologically speaking, Inuit language (Eskaleut family) is notoriously polysynthetic both at the le...
This thesis explores the properties of adjectives and adverbs in Inuit (Eskimo-Aleut), with focus on...
This dissertation is a reference grammar of the Malimiut Coastal dialect of Inupiaq (ISO: ESI, ESK, ...
In the following I will discuss grammatical structures of Inuktitut, an Eskimo language spoken in th...
This paper discusses the relationship between the morphological structure of language and its syntac...
Semantics of Noun-Incorporating Affixes in the Inuit Language (East Greenland) In the Inuit language...
This dissertation is a description of a dialect of Eskimo, Inuktitut, spoken in the Inuit community ...
International audienceThe so-called "ergative", "absolutive" and "antipassive" constructions are her...
This paper examines some seemingly disparate uses of the morpheme -si in two very closely related In...
This dissertation is a description of a dialect of Eskimo, Inuktitut, spoken in the Inuit community ...
International audienceThe so-called "ergative", "absolutive" and "antipassive" constructions are her...
The goal of this paper is to provide a minimalist account of the morphology of Inuit languages (part...
International audiencePolysynthesis in Inuit appears at both lexical and sentence levels. The analys...
An investigation of the first language acquisition of productive nouns in Inuktitut (Inupiaq) is pre...
International audiencePolysynthesis in Inuit appears at both lexical and sentence levels. The analys...
Typologically speaking, Inuit language (Eskaleut family) is notoriously polysynthetic both at the le...