Anda belum login :: 20 Apr 2025 12:31 WIB
Detail
ArtikelTense, aspect, mood and evidentiality in Sasak, eastern Indonesia  
Oleh: Austin, Peter K.
Jenis: Article from Books
Dalam koleksi: NUSA: Linguistics Studies of Language in and around Indonesia Volume 55: Tense, Aspect, Mood and Evidentiality in Languages of Indonesia, page 41-56.
Fulltext: Peter K. AUSTIN.pdf (500.83KB)
Ketersediaan
  • Perpustakaan PKBB
    • Nomor Panggil: 405 NUS 55
    • Non-tandon: 1 (dapat dipinjam: 1)
    • Tandon: 1
   Reserve Lihat Detail Induk
Isi artikelSasak is typical of Austronesian languages spoken in western Indonesian in that it lacks any inflectional morphology, and does not mark tense. Rather there is a set of pre-verbal particles (which can host pronominal clitics) that encode various polarity, aspectual and modal distinctions. These particles show a range of differing forms in Sasak varieties, though they have the same syntactic behaviour (they occur as second position word-level clitics) and appear to express the same semantics across Sasak. One group of varieties spoken in eastern Lombok appears to have a realis-irrealis mood contrast for transitive verbs only that is expressed via the relative location of pronominal clitics with respect to the verb stem (proclitic or enclitic). This paper describes the forms and functions of aspect and mood marking in Sasak, presenting examples from the extensive corpus I have been collecting since 1995. I also discuss a somewhat unusual construction that appears to be the functional equivalent of evidentiality in Sasak.
Opini AndaKlik untuk menuliskan opini Anda tentang koleksi ini!

Kembali
design
 
Process time: 0.015625 second(s)