[Fwd: question for Austronesian list]

Midori Osumi nekubunpoo at GMAIL.COM
Wed Dec 16 13:10:22 UTC 2009


Dear Annemarie

While the verbal prefix *fa*- 'causative'  is attached productively to
verbs, either intransitive or transitive (pp113-118), and also it derives
ordinal numbers (p46),Tinrin has *ve* (and not *fa-*)(meaning 'take', as a
verb*),* which occurs as adverbializer (like *ve-harru* (ve-good) meaning
'well', and often in serial verb constructions (pp 220-221).

Tinrin Grammar, 1995, University of Hawai'i Press

best
Midori Osumi
Tokyo Woman's Christian University

2009/12/11 Wayan Arka <wayan.arka at anu.edu.au>

> Dear All,
>
> This is posted on behalf of Annemarie <annemarie.verkerk at mpi.nl>.
> Thanks.
>
> Best,
> -Wayan
>
>
>
> ----
>
> Dear all,
>
> we (myself and Benedicte Frostad from Radboud University Nijmegen, the
> Netherlands) are justing starting on a project concerning the following
> phenomenon. The prefix which is used for causatives, fa- or va-,
> reflexes of Proto-Austronesian *paka-, is, in some Oceanic languages,
> also used in serial verb constructions to derive manner predications,
> i.e. adverb-like things, as in this example from Hoava:
>
> Tanini va-hevá.
> hold CAUS-strong.TR:3SG
> 'Hold it strongly.' Davis (2003: 77)
>
> or resultative verbs:
>
> Ego, naní sa, nani va-paho-e.
> well eat.TR.3PL PRO:3SG eat CAUS-empty-TR.3PL
> 'Well, he ate them, ate and emptied them.' Davis (2003: 161)
>
> So far, our findings indicate that some Oceanic languages pattern like
> this, while others do not use the causative marker in this way. Since
> this seems to be an interesting topic to pursue, we were wondering
> whether there has been any prior research into this. Since we haven't
> been able to find any, we would be very grateful if you could inform us
> of any publications or research concerning this topic.
>
> with kind regards,
> Annemarie Verkerk
> a.verkerk at mpi.nl
> Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, the Netherlands
>
>
> --
>
> Annemarie Verkerk, MA
> Evolutionary Processes in Language and Culture (PhD student)
> Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
> P.O. Box 310, 6500AH Nijmegen, The Netherlands
> +31 (0)24 3521 185
> http://www.mpi.nl/research/research-projects/evolutionary-processes
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> An-lang mailing list
> An-lang at anu.edu.au
> http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/an-lang
>
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