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Coverbs and Complex Predicates in Wagiman

Stephen Wilson

Wagiman is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken in the Top End of the Northern Territory. It possesses an unusual open class of words which the author calls "coverbs". Most frequently, coverbs are paired with an inflecting verb from a closed class to form a complex predicate: the coverb and inflecting verb jointly determine the verbal semantics and argument structure of the clause. This book provides a descriptive and analytical account of the behaviour of coverbs in Wagiman, especially their role in complex predicate formation. Wilson aims to discover what principles are at work in directing and constraining this process, and how the meaning of the whole is derived from the meanings of the parts. After discussing a wide range of relevant data from the language, he outlines a formal analysis within Lexical Functional Grammar. He argues that to account for the intricacy of Wagiman complex predicates, it is necessary for the grammar to make explicit reference to representations of lexical meaning, and he proposes that complex predicate formation can be seen as the fusion of these semantic representations.

3/1/99

ISBN (Paperback): 1575861720

ISBN (Cloth): 1575861739

Subject: Linguistics; Wageman (Wagiman) Language--Verb phrase; Wageman (Wagiman) Language--Adjectives

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Distributed by the
University of
Chicago Press

Series: Stanford Monographs in Linguistics




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