In:Clause Linking and Clause Hierarchy: Syntax and pragmatics
Edited by Isabelle Bril
[Studies in Language Companion Series 121] 2010
► pp. 143–164
Finite and non-finite
Prosodic distinctions on Budugh verb stems
Published online: 25 November 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.121.05aut
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.121.05aut
In Budugh, a small Daghestanian language spoken in Azerbaijan, verb-stems, defined as verb forms uninflected for tense or mood, can be used either as dependent of nouns (‘participles’) and other predicates (verbal nouns or hereafter ‘masdars’, and ‘sequential converbs’) or as finite non-indicative verb forms, that is with modal use, especially in a variety of injunctive nuances. The main distinction between dependent and independent uses is prosodic: dependent verb forms adopt the prosodic features of nouns, while the same forms, if syntactically independent, share the same prosodic pattern as other indicative or more complex modal forms which are segmentally marked (suffixed) as such.
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