In:Nonverbal Predication in Amazonian Languages
Edited by Simon E. Overall, Rosa Vallejos and Spike Gildea
[Typological Studies in Language 122] 2018
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 21 August 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.122.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.122.toc
Table of contents
Chapter 1.Nonverbal predication in Amazonia: Typological and diachronic
considerations1
Simon E. Overall
Rosa Vallejos
Spike Gildea
Part I.Overviews of nonverbal predication in individual languages51
Chapter 2.Nonverbal predication and the nonverbal clause type of Mojeño Trinitario
(Arawakan)53
Françoise Rose
Chapter 3.Nonverbal predication in Paresi-Haliti (Arawakan)85
Ana Paula Brandão
Chapter 4.Nonverbal predication in Kari’nja (Cariban)103
Racquel Sapién
Chapter 5.Nominal predicates and enclitic copula in Aguaruna (Chicham)135
Simon E. Overall
Chapter 6.To hi or not to hi? Nonverbal predication in Kotiria and Wa’ikhana
(Eastern Tukanoan)163
Kristine Stenzel
Chapter 7.Between verb and noun: Exploration into the domain of nonverbal
predication in Ecuadorian Secoya (Western Tukanoan)193
Anne Schwarz
Chapter 8.Nonverbal predication in Movima (Isolate)217
Katharina Haude
Chapter 9.Nonverbal predication in Ninam (Yanomaman, northern Brazil)245
Gale Goodwin Gómez
Part II.Exploring specific subtypes of nonverbal predicates261
Chapter 10.Locative, existential and possessive predication in the Chaco: Nivaĉle
(Mataguayan) and Pilagá (Guaykuruan)263
Doris Payne
Alejandra Vidal
Manuel Otero
Chapter 11.Possessive semantic relations and construction types in Kukama-Kukamiria
(Tupían)295
Rosa Vallejos
Part III.Diachronic pathways to and from nonverbal predication315
Chapter 12.Constructions with has(a) in Wampis (Chicham)317
Jaime Peña
Chapter 13.Evidence for the development of action nominals in Awetí (Tupían) towards
ergatively-marked predicates339
Sabine Reiter
Chapter 14.Reconstructing nonverbal predicate constructions and copulas in
Cariban365
Spike Gildea
Index403
