In:Functional-Historical Approaches to Explanation: In honor of Scott DeLancey
Edited by Tim Thornes, Erik Andvik, Gwendolyn Hyslop and Joana Jansen
[Typological Studies in Language 103] 2013
► pp. 195–220
Tense-aspect morphology from nominalizers in Newar
Published online: 25 July 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.103.10gen
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.103.10gen
This paper examines the historical status of tense-aspect suffixes in the Kathmandu Valley and Eastern branches of Newar. By comparing across branches and triangulating with Classical Newar, the paper demonstrates that the innovative past anterior and present tense markers in Eastern Newar were derived from nominalizers. The future tense marker -i, which is found in both branches of the family, also had nominalizing functions, as did the precursors of every suffix now used in finite contexts in Kathmandu Newar. This suggests that the current finite morphology in the Kathmandu Valley varieties was entirely derived from nominalizers as the original system of verb agreement was lost. The mechanism for this process would have been non-embedded nominalization, a common syntactic pattern of Tibeto-Burman.
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Zemp, Marius
2020. Evidentials and their pivot in Tibetic and neighboring Himalayan languages. Functions of Language 27:1 ► pp. 29 ff.
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