Pacific Linguistics: new publication
Malcolm Ross
Malcolm.Ross at anu.edu.au
Wed Feb 7 04:25:09 UTC 2001
PACIFIC LINGUISTICS is happy to announce the publication of the
second (and final) volume of the Proceedings of the Second
International Conference on Oceanic Linguistics
Prices are in Australian dollars (one Australian dollar is currently
equivalent to about US$ 0,55.).
Orders may be placed by mail, e-mail or telephone with:
The Publications Administrator
Pacific Linguistics
Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200 Australia
Tel: +61 (0)2 6249 2742
Fax: +61 (0)2 6249 4896
mailto://jmanley@coombs.anu.edu.au
Credit card orders are accepted.
For our catalogue and other materials, see:
http://pacling.anu.edu.au (under construction)
_______________________________________________________________
SICOL Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Oceanic
Linguistics: Vol. 2, Historical and descriptive studies
Palmer, Bill and Paul Geraghty (eds)
PL 505
In July 1995 the University of the South Pacific in Suva, Fiji, played host
to the Second International Conference on Oceanic Languages, or SICOL - the
second in a successful series of international conferences devoted to the
main language family of the South Pacific, the Oceanic branch of the large
Austronesian stock.
A special session of the conference was devoted to contact languages, and a
number of papers from that session have already been published by Pacific
Linguistics as the first volume of the proceedings. This second and final
volume contains a selection of papers dealing with Oceanic languages
themselves. The nineteen papers presented here range from descriptive
studies of the morphology, syntax or lexicon of individual languages
through work on subgrouping to aspects of Proto Oceanic.
Together these papers give a taste of the diversity of
Oceanic languages
and the range of research carried out on this important language
family. A list of contents is given below.
2000 ISBN 0 85883 476 6
AUS $93.00 ($85.00)
_______________________________________________________________
Part 1: Proto Oceanic studies
1 Star, wind, and wave: searching for early Oceanic navigation terms
Meredith Osmond
2 Where did suli come from? A study of the words connected to taro
plants in Oceanic languages
Ritsuko Kikusawa
3 The true prepositions/casemarkers in Proto Oceanic
Joseph C. Finney
Part 2: Languages of Melanesia
4 Sit, stand, lie: posture verbs and imperfectives
Robert Early
5 'Come' and 'go' in Kilivila
Gunter Senft
6 Roviana clauses
Evelyn M. Todd
7 Linguistic subgrouping in Vanuatu and New Caledonia
John Lynch
8 How did Erromangan verbs get so messy?
Terry Crowley
9 'Adjectives' in Tamambo, Malo: syntactic variation, semantic and
discourse correlation
Dorothy Jauncey
10 Some Raga vocabulary for terrestrial invertebrates, reptiles and
mammals of North Pentecost
D.S. Walsh, Richard Leona, Wendy Pond
11 Postmodification and the structure of relatives in Nêlêmwa and other
Kanak languages of New Caledonia
Isabelle Bril
12 Un exemple de morphosyntaxe en Nengone (Nouvelle-Caledonie):
les variations morphologiques et la transitivité
R. Davel Cawa
Part 3: Central Pacific languages
13 Two be's or not two be's? On the copulas of Wayan Fijian
Andrew Pawley
14 The dialects of the Yasawa Islands of Fiji
Geraldine Triffitt
15 Kuhane and 'aitu. Two cognate Polynesian terms which exclude
each other
Horst Cain and Annette Bierbach
16 Cia-words in Tokelauan
Even Hovdhaugen
17 Ergative case avoidance in East Futunan (Efu)
Claire Moyse-Faurie
18 Gahua he tohi vagahau Niue: Niue dictionary project: orthography and
vowel quality
--
_____________________________________
Dr Malcolm D. Ross
Senior Fellow
Department of Linguistics
Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies
Australian National University
CANBERRA ACT 0200
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