10 research outputs found
Non-finite adverbial subordination in Chintang
In Chintang (Sino-Tibetan, Kiranti) both finite and non-finite
adverbial clauses are found. In this paper we discuss only nonfinite subordinate clauses in terms of their control behaviour, S/A coreferentiality, scope and other morpho-syntactic properties. An interesting feature of Chintang non-finite adverbial clause is their the person and number marking
Free prefix ordering in Chintang
This article demonstrates prefix permutability in Chintang (Sino-Tibetan, Nepal) that is not constrained by any semantic or morphosyntactic structure, or by any dialect, sociolect, or idiolect choice—a phenomenon ruled out by standard assumptions about grammatical words. The prefixes are fully fledged parts of grammatical words and are different from clitics on a large number of standard criteria. The analysis of phonological word domains suggests that prefix permutability is a side-effect of prosodic subcategorization: prefixes occur in variable orders because each prefix and each stem element project a phonological word of their own, and each such word can host a prefix, at any position
Resisting the state in East Nepal: the `Chintang incident' of 1979 and the politics of commemoration
Nouns and verbs in Chintang: children’s usage and surrounding adult speech*
Analyzing the development of the noun-to-verb ratio in a longitudinal
corpus of four Chintang (Sino-Tibetan) children, we find that up to
about age four, children have a significantly higher ratio than adults.
Previous cross-linguistic research rules out an explanation of this in
[*] This research was made by possible by Grant Nos. BI 799/1-2 and II/81 961 from the
Volkswagen Foundation (DoBeS program). Author contributions: Stoll designed the
study; Bickel performed the data extraction and statistical analysis; Stoll, Bickel and
Lieven wrote the paper; all authors contributed to the development of the corpus. We
warmly thank the children and families in taking part in this study. We are grateful to
our Chintang assistants for their work on transcription and translation and our student
assistants in Leipzig for their work on glossing and tagging the data. The data reported
in this work are deposited and available on request at the DoBeS archive . All data extraction analysis was performed using R (R Development Core
Team, 2010), with the additional packages lattice (Sarkar, 2010) and gam (Hastie, 2010).
terms of a universal noun bias; instead, a likely cause is that Chintang verb
morphology is polysynthetic and difficult to learn. This hypothesis is
supported by the fact that the development of Chintang children’s
noun-to-verb ratio correlates significantly with the extent to which
they show a similar flexibility with verbal morphology to that of the
surrounding adults, as measured by morphological paradigm entropy.
While this development levels off around age three, children continue to
have a higher overall noun-to-verb ratio than adults. A likely explanation
lies in the kinds of activities that children are engaged in and that are
almost completely separate from adults’ activities in this culture