What is it about?

The article is about whether or not the lexemes in Amis (Formosan) and Nêlêmwa (New Caledonia) are subcategorised as nouns, verbs and other categories, and at what level of analysis (roots, stems, or words set in a syntactic frame) ? The other related question is how flexible or rigid their categories and functions are. Amis is an instance of a language whose lexical roots are mostly subcategorised, while Nêlêmwa's lexemes are mostly categorised as nouns or verbs.

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Why is it important?

THis is part of a debate on categories in languages in general and in Austronesian languages in particular. Detailed analyses of Amis and Nêlêmwa substantiate the notion that Amis lexical roots are pervasively categorially neutral. . Only primarily and secondarily derived word forms are categorised as nouns, verbs, or adjectival modifiers. But, once roots have been derived and inflected into word forms, they are strictly categorised and unambiguously identifiable. In contrast,, Nêlêmwa has fairly rigid lexical categories. Only 5% of the lexicon is categorially flexible (as nouns or verbs), all other lexemes are subcategorised and undergo category-changing derivations. But there is some degree of functional flexibility.

Perspectives

I've been working extensively on both languages, doing fieldwork research on both. This article shows that among Formosan languages, Amis has pervasive subcategorised lexical roots. On the other hand, among New Caledonian languages, Nêlêmwa displays an opposite situation with much more rigid lexical caategorisation. Both show the extreme variation among Austronesian languages.

Dr. Prof. Isabelle BRIL
LACITO-CNRS

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Roots and stems in Amis and Nêlêmwa (Austronesian), Studies in Language, September 2017, John Benjamins,
DOI: 10.1075/sl.41.2.04bri.
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