34.2254, TOC: Linguistique et Langues Africaines (LLA) 8 / 2 (2023)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-34-2254. Wed Jul 19 2023. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 34.2254, TOC: Linguistique et Langues Africaines (LLA) 8 / 2 (2023)

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Date: 15-Apr-2023
From: Yvonne Treis [llafrique at cnrs.fr]
Subject: Linguistique et Langues Africaines (LLA) Vol. 8, No. 2 (2023)


Publisher: LLACAN
                        http://llacan.vjf.cnrs.fr

Journal Title: Linguistique et Langues Africaines (LLA)
Volume Number: 8
Issue Number: 2
Issue Date: 04/14/2023

Subtitle: The noncausal/causal alternation in African languages

Main Text:

The journal Linguistique et Langues Africaines (LLA) has just
published issue 8(2) / 2022:

[Special issue] « The noncausal/causal alternation in African
languages », guest-edited by Sebastian Dom, Leora Bar-el, Ponsiano
Sawaka Kanijo & Malin Petzell
(https://journals.openedition.org/lla/2206):

ARTICLES

1. Sebastian Dom, Leora Bar-el, Ponsiano Sawaka Kanijo & Malin
Petzell: The noncausal/causal alternation in African languages: An
introduction
2. Denis Creissels: The noncausal/causal alternation and the limits of
ambitransitivity in a sample of sub-Saharan languages
3. Ronny Meyer: The noncausal/causal alternation in Muher
(Ethiosemitic)
4. Yvonne Treis: Verbal derivation in Kambaata (Cushitic), with a
focus on the encoding of noncausal/causal alternations
5. Marc Allassonnière-Tang, Stéphane Robert & Sylvie Voisin: The
noncausal/causal alternation and genealogical affiliation:
Quantitative testing in three Niger-Congo language families
6. Gertrud Schneider-Blum: On noncausal/causal alternations in Tima
(Nuba Mountains, Sudan)
7. Nobuko Yoneda: The noncausal/causal alternation in Swahili
8. Sebastian Dom, Leora Bar-el, Ponsiano Sawaka Kanijo & Malin
Petzell: Variation in the coding of the noncausal/causal alternation:
Causative *-i in East Bantu languages
9. Antti Laine, Rasmus Bernander & Lotta Aunio: The noncausal/causal
alternation in the Western Serengeti languages

BOOK REVIEWS

1. Shigeki Kaji: Saudah Namyalo, Alena Witzlack-Makarevich, Anatole
Kiriggwajjo, Amos Atuhairwe, Zarina Molochieva, Ruth Mukama & Margaret
Zellers, A dictionary and grammatical sketch of Ruruuli-Lunyala
2. Modeste Simbikangwa: Mathias Brack & Marie-Goretti Musoni,
Wörterbuch Kinyarwanda-Deutsch. Mit Einführung in Sprache und
Grammatik

All articles are freely available in html and pdf on OpenEdition:
https://journals.openedition.org/lla/2206

LLA provides a forum for linguists working on the phonology,
morphology, syntax, pragmatics and semantics of African languages. The
main purpose of LLA is to enlarge our knowledge and understanding of
the enormous linguistic diversity in Africa, much of which is still
sparsely documented. Contributions to LLA are expected to be
data-driven (e.g. primary data from fieldwork or other corpus data),
and the discussion of theoretical issues is appreciated to the extent
that it helps to elucidate the data and remains accessible to persons
that are not specialists in the relevant theory. All major theoretical
frameworks are equally welcome. We are also interested in
historical-comparative, areal linguistic and ethnolinguistic
contributions.

Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics
                     Morphology
                     Typology

Language Family(ies): Afroasiatic
                      Niger-Congo
                      Nilo-Saharan



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