The Languages of the AndesCambridge University Press, 10.6.2004 - 718 sivua The Andean and Pacific regions of South America are home to a remarkable variety of languages and language families, with a range of typological differences. This linguistic diversity results from a complex historical background, comprising periods of greater communication between different peoples and languages, and periods of fragmentation and individual development. The Languages of the Andes documents in a single volume the indigenous languages spoken and formerly spoken in this linguistically rich region, as well as in adjacent areas. Grouping the languages into different cultural spheres, it describes their characteristics in terms of language typology, language contact, and the social perspectives of present-day languages. The authors provide both historical and contemporary information, and illustrate the languages with detailed grammatical sketches. Written in a clear and accessible style, this book will be a valuable source for students and scholars of linguistics and anthropology alike. |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 52
Sivu v
... Research on the native languages of Colombia 54 2.3 Chocoan 56 2.4 Yurumanguí 60 2.5 Cuna 61 66 2.7 Chimila 2.8 Barí 2.9 The Muisca language 2.9.1 Sources. 2.6 The languages of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta Contents.
... Research on the native languages of Colombia 54 2.3 Chocoan 56 2.4 Yurumanguí 60 2.5 Cuna 61 66 2.7 Chimila 2.8 Barí 2.9 The Muisca language 2.9.1 Sources. 2.6 The languages of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta Contents.
Sivu vi
Willem F. H. Adelaar. 2.7 Chimila 2.8 Barí 2.9 The Muisca language 2.9.1 Sources 2.9.2 Phonology 2.9.3 Grammar 2.9.4 Lexicon 2.9.5 A Muisca text 75 80 81 82 83 89 103 106 2.10 Tunebo ( Uw Cuwa ) 109 2.11 Yukpa and Magdalena valley ...
Willem F. H. Adelaar. 2.7 Chimila 2.8 Barí 2.9 The Muisca language 2.9.1 Sources 2.9.2 Phonology 2.9.3 Grammar 2.9.4 Lexicon 2.9.5 A Muisca text 75 80 81 82 83 89 103 106 2.10 Tunebo ( Uw Cuwa ) 109 2.11 Yukpa and Magdalena valley ...
Sivu x
... Muisca consonant phonemes 88 2.7 Inventory of Muisca vowel phonemes 88 2.8 Personal reference in Muisca 97 2.9 Inventory of Muisca pronoun and case combinations 100 2.10 Uw Cuwa (Tunebo) consonant inventory 110 2.11 Proto-Yukpa ...
... Muisca consonant phonemes 88 2.7 Inventory of Muisca vowel phonemes 88 2.8 Personal reference in Muisca 97 2.9 Inventory of Muisca pronoun and case combinations 100 2.10 Uw Cuwa (Tunebo) consonant inventory 110 2.11 Proto-Yukpa ...
Sivu xvi
... Muisca and Puquina, which have long been extinct, are known from premodern sources only, and the interpretation of the symbols used to represent them remains tentative. In the case of relatively recent data from languages that became ...
... Muisca and Puquina, which have long been extinct, are known from premodern sources only, and the interpretation of the symbols used to represent them remains tentative. In the case of relatively recent data from languages that became ...
Sivu 2
... , Mapuche and Quechua, maintained a prominent position during the colonial period, partly at the cost of other languages, only to become endangered themselves in the subsequent period. Mapuche, Muisca and Quechua acted as 2 1 Introduction.
... , Mapuche and Quechua, maintained a prominent position during the colonial period, partly at the cost of other languages, only to become endangered themselves in the subsequent period. Mapuche, Muisca and Quechua acted as 2 1 Introduction.
Sisältö
1 | |
46 | |
3 The Inca Sphere | 165 |
4 The languages of the eastern slopes | 411 |
5 The Araucanian Sphere | 502 |
6 The languages of Tierra del Fuego | 550 |
7 The Spanish presence | 585 |
Appendix Inventory of languages and language families of the Andean region | 610 |
References | 625 |
Author Index | 681 |
Index of Languages and Ethnic Groups | 690 |
Subject Index | 703 |
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
affixes affricate Allentiac Amazonas Andaquí Andean Araucanian Arawakan Arawakan languages Argentina Atacameño Ayacucho Ayacucho Quechua Aymara Aymaran languages Barbacoan Barbacoan languages Bolivia Cajamarca Callahuaya Cariban century Cerrón-Palomino Chibchan Chile Chipaya Cholón clauses Colombia colonial consonant inventory Constenla Umaña Cuzco Cuzco Quechua distinction Ecuador Ecuadorian element ending examples extinct first-person fricative genitive glottal glottalised Golbert de Goodbar González de Pérez grammar groups Guajiro Guambiano Hardman highlands Inca Indians indicated Jaqaru Kawesqar Kogui Labial language family lengua lexical Lima linguistic Mapuche marking Middendorf 1892 Mochica morphological Muisca nasal nominalisation northern noun object occur Pacaraos Pacaraos Quechua Páez palatal paradigm pers Peru Peruvian phoneme phonological plur plural possessive preceding prefix pronouns province Puquina Quechua dialects Quechua II region root second-person Selk'nam Shuar Smeets Spanish speakers spoken stops Tehuelche tense third-person subject Torero Tsafiki varieties velar verb verbal voiceless vowel suppression word Yahgan