Article published In: Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area
Vol. 48:1 (2025) ► pp.60–98
Preliminary study of the verbal morphosyntax of Dolpo
A Tibetic language of Nepal
Published online: 17 April 2025
https://doi.org/10.1075/ltba.24005.vok
https://doi.org/10.1075/ltba.24005.vok
Abstract
The goal of this article is a description of the verbal system
of Dolpo, a Tibetic language of Nepal, and to demonstrate some of its original
features concerning verbal morphosyntax. Dolpo no longer reflects Old Tibetan
verb inflections: instead, tense-aspect is conveyed by a system of verbal
endings that are combinations of nominalizers and equative or existential verbs.
Unlike Common Tibetan and other Tibetic languages, Dolpo exhibits original
morphophonemic variations of verbal morphosyntax, a description of which
comprises the main part of this article. Morphophonemic variations also apply to
negation markers and interrogative enclitics. This complex system of
morphophonemic variations is demonstrated by examples obtained during our
linguistic fieldwork in Dolpo in 2022 and 2023.
Keywords: Dolpo, Nepal, Tibetic language, verbal morphosyntax, morphophonemic variation
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 1.1The Dolpo language
- 1.2Phonological transcription
- 1.3Dolpo orthography in Tibetan script
- 2.Equative and existential verbs
- 2.1Equative verbs
- 2.2Existential verbs
- 3.Verbal endings
- 3.1Present and the imperfective
- 3.1.1Egophoric present
- 3.1.2Factual present
- 3.1.3Sensory present
- 3.1.4Non-visual sensory present
- 3.1.5Sensory inferential present
- 3.2Preterit
- 3.2.1Egophoric intentional preterit
- 3.2.2Factual preterit
- 3.2.3Sensory preterit
- 3.2.4Egophoric receptive preterit
- 3.3Progressive present and past
- 3.4Perfect
- 3.4.1Egophoric perfect
- 3.4.2Factual perfect
- 3.4.3Sensory perfect
- 3.5Future
- 3.5.1Egophoric future
- 3.5.2Factual future
- 3.5.3Inferential future
- 3.1Present and the imperfective
- 4.Verb stem alternation and verbal suppletive forms
- 4.1Verb stem alternation
- 4.2Suppletive verbal forms
- 5.Morphophonemic variation of the verb
- 5.1Morphophonemic variation of the present
- 5.2Morphophonemic variation of the preterit
- The variants /-win/ and /-widik/
- The variants /-in/ and /-i(yin)dik/
- The variants /-din/ and /-di(yin)dik/
- The variants /-bin/ and /-bi(yin)dik/
- 5.3Morphophonemic variation of the future
- 6.Negation markers
- 7.Interrogative enclitics
- 8.Conclusion
- Notes
- Abbreviations
References
References (25)
Bauer, Kenneth. 2004. High
frontiers: Dolpo and the changing world of Himalaya
pastoralists. New York: Columbia University Press.
Beyer, S. V. 1992. The
Classical Tibetan language. New York: State University of New York. Reprint 1993, (Bibliotheca
Indo-Buddhica series,
116.) Delhi: Sri Satguru.
endangeredlanguages.com ([URL])
van Driem, George. 2007. South
Asia and the Middle
East. In Christopher Moseley (ed.), Encyclopedia
of the World’s Endangered
Languages, 283–347. London & New York: Routledge. ([URL])
Garrett, Edward John. (2001). Evidentiality
and Assertion in Tibetan. Los Angeles: University of California PhD thesis. ([URL])
Gawne, Lauren. 2016. A
sketch grammar of Lamjung
Yolmo. Canberra: Asia-Pacific Linguistics. ([URL])
. 2017. Egophoric
evidentiality in Bodish
languages. In Lauren Gawne & Nathan W. Hill (eds.), Evidential
systems of Tibetan languages (Trends in
Linguistics Studies and Monographs,
302), 61–94. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.
Gawne, Lauren & Nathan W. Hill (eds). 2017. Evidential
systems of Tibetan languages. (Trends in
Linguistics. Studies and Monographs,
302.). Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.
Gurung, Phurwa Dhondup. 2020. “Mountains
are common, grasses are divided”: Indigenous environmental governance
between conservation and democracy. Boulder: University of Colorado dissertation. ProQuest
LLC. ([URL])
Jest, Corneille. 1975. Communautés
de langue tibétaine du
Népal. Paris: Éditions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
Nima Hojer Lama (Nyima
Choekhortsang). 2017. The
genealogy of Ya-ngal Family of Dolpo (Critical
Edition of the Text, Translation into English, Analyses of Abbreviations and
Introduction to the Dolpo
Dialect). Praha: Univerzita Karlova.
Qu, Aitang & Kerang Tan. 1983. Ali zang-yu [The Tibetan dialect of Ngari]. Dai 1 ban
edn, 4091. Beijing: Zhongguo minzu shehui kexue chubanshe.
Tournadre, Nicolas & Sangda Dorje. 2003. Manual
of Standard Tibetan: Language and
civilization. Ithaca, New York: Snow Lion Publications.
Tournadre, Nicolas & Jiatso. 2001. Final
auxiliary verbs in literary Tibetan and in the
Dialects. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area 24(1).49–111.
Tournadre, Nicolas & Randy J. LaPolla. 2014. Towards
a new approach to evidentiality. Issues and directions for
research. Linguistics
of the Tibeto-Burman Area 37(2).240–262.
Tournadre, Nicolas, Lhakpa Norbu Sherpa, Gyurme Chodrak & Guillaume Oisel. 2009. Sherpa-English
and English Sherpa dictionary with Literary Tibetan and Nepali
equivalents. Kathmandu, Nepal: Vajra. ([URL])
Tournadre, Nicolas & Hiroyuki Suzuki. 2023. The
Tibetic Languages: An introduction to the family of languages derived from
Old
Tibetan. Paris: LACITO. ([URL])
Tournadre, Nicolas & Zuzana Vokurková. Forthcoming. Preliminary
study of the evidential-epistemic system of Dolpo, a Tibetic language of
Nepal.
Tsering & George van
Driem, 2019. The grammar
of Dzongkha. Revised and expanded, with a guide to Roman Dzongkha and to phonological Dzongkha. Santa Barbara: Himalayan Linguistics. ([URL].)
Vesalainen, Olavi. 2016. A
grammar sketch of Lhomi. (SIL Language and
Culture Documentation and Description,
34.) Dallas, Texas: SIL International.
Vokurková, Zuzana. 2017. Epistemic
modality in Standard Spoken Tibetan: Epistemic verbal endings and
copulas, Prague: Karolinum Press.
Watters, Stephen. 2002. The
sounds and tones of five Tibetan languages of the Himalayan
region. Linguistics
of the Tibeto-Burman
Area 25(1).1–65. ([URL])
Yliniemi, Juha. 2021. A
descriptive grammar of Denjongke (Sikkimese
Bhutia). Linguistics Archive No. 10
i-xxx. ([URL])
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Tournadre, Nicolas & Zuzana Vokurková
2025. A preliminary study of the evidential-epistemic system of Dolpo, a Tibetic language of Nepal. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area 48:2 ► pp. 193 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 14 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
