Complex Sentence Constructions in Australian Languages
Editor
Over the past fifteen years, descriptions of Australian Aboriginal languages have provided important data for the typological study of morpho-syntactic phenomena. The present volume presents descriptions of complex sentence phenomena in ten Australian languages and provides important new material in this area of current concern in linguistics. Complex sentences are described either from a syntactic or from a semantic (discourse-functional) point of view. The papers draw on data from widely distributed and, in some instances, previously undescribed languages. Among others descriptions of the (so-far) poorly known non-Pama-Nyungan languages of northern Australia, as well as Pama-Nyungan languages central and northern Australia are included in this volume.
[Typological Studies in Language, 15] 1988. vii, 289 pp.
Publishing status: Available
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
Preface
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1
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3
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7
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37
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69
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97
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141
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177
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193
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205
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219
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267
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Index of Languages
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285
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Index of Names
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287
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Cited by
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Croft, William
Kuteva, Tania, Bernd Heine, Bo Hong, Haiping Long, Heiko Narrog & Seongha Rhee
Morris, Janet, John Newman, Koenraad Kuiper, Jeffrey P. Williams, Yon Maley, Graham McKay, Roland Sussex & Manjit S. Gilhotra
Nordlinger, Rachel
2006. Spearing the Emu Drinking: Subordination and the Adjoined Relative Clause in Wambaya* Some aspects of this paper were presented at the Blackwood workshop on subordination in Australian languages, March 2002. I would like to thank the participants of that workshop for helpful feedback, and particularly Nick Evans, Ian Green, Mary Laughren, Nick Piper, Nick Reid, Jean-Christophe Verstraete and the anonymousAJLreviewers for discussions, comments and suggestions that have helped shape and improve this paper. Of course, these people may not necessarily agree with the perspective presented here and cannot be held responsible for remaining errors or inadequacies. This research has been financially supported by an ARC APD Fellowship (F9930026) held at the University of Melbourne..
Australian Journal of Linguistics 26:1 ► pp. 5 ff. 
Nordlinger, Rachel
Schultze-Berndt, Eva & Nikolaus P. Himmelmann
Vuillermet, Marine
Vuillermet, Marine
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Subjects
BIC Subject: CF – Linguistics
BISAC Subject: LAN009000 – LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General