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The Locative Class in Shengologa (Kgalagadi)

by Sabine Hoeth (Author)
©1999 Thesis 244 Pages

Summary

Shengologa (Kgalagadi) is a Bantu language spoken in the Republic of Botswana. The present volume describes a set of nouns in Shengologa. This set of nouns is distinguished within a synchronic analysis from other grammatical categories on purely formal grounds and reanalysed as one class only: the locative class. The extent to which prefixes of this class interact with other parts of grammar leads to the establishment of several form classes. All established form classes coincide with the semantic reference «locative».

Details

Pages
244
Year
1999
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631349380
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Wien, 1999. 244 pp., num. tab.

Biographical notes

Sabine Hoeth (Author)

The Author: Sabine Neumann studied African Linguistics and Social Anthropology at Bayreuth University, Germany. She was a member of the Cognitive Anthropology Research Group (Max-Planck-Institute for Psycholinguistics) at Nijmegen, The Netherlands, and conducted field research in Botswana. Since 1997 she has been working as research fellow at the University of Frankfurt am Main, Germany.

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Title: The Locative Class in Shengologa (Kgalagadi)