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  • Case in Semitic: Roles, Relations, and Reconstruction

    Case in Semitic by Hasselbach, Rebecca;

    Roles, Relations, and Reconstruction

    Series: Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics; 3;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 2 May 2013

    • ISBN 9780199671809
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages370 pages
    • Size 241x162x25 mm
    • Weight 726 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    This book reconstructs the Semitic case system, based on a detailed analysis of the expression of grammatical roles and relations in the attested Semitic languages. It brings typological methods to bear on the study of comparative Semitics and includes detailed analyses of a wide range of data. The book will interest Semiticists and typologists.

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    Long description:

    This book sets out a new reconstruction for the Semitic case system. It is based on a detailed analysis of the expression of grammatical roles and relations in the attested Semitic languages and, for the first time, brings typological methods to bear in the study of these features in Semitic languages and their reconstruction for proto-Semitic. Professor Hasselbach supports her argument with detailed analyses of a wide range of data and presents it in a way that will be accessible to both Semitists and typologists.
    The volume is divided into seven chapters: the first discusses basic methodologies used in Semitic linguistics and the limitations thereof. The second presents the evidence for morphological case-marking in the individual Semitic languages, the conventional reconstruction of Proto-Semitic, and the evidence which conflicts with it. The third introduces typological concepts and methods and their deployment in Semitic. Chapter 4 considers the case alignment of early Semitic. Chapter 5 presents a detailed study of marking structures and patterns and considers what these reveal about the nature of the original case system. Chapter 6 looks at the functions of case markers, considers the light they cast on the nominal system, and shows that the reconstruction of early Semitic as ergative is implausible. In the final chapter the author argues that early Semitic had a different nominal system from that of the later Semitic languages. She shows that the course of its development has parallels in other Afroasiatic languages, including Berber and Cushitic. Her book sheds important new light on the history of the Semitic languages and on the early development of the Afro-Asiatic language family as a whole.

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    Table of Contents:

    Abbreviations
    Introduction
    The Semitic case system: basic evidence and traditional reconstruction
    Linguistic Typology
    Grammatical roles and the alignment of Semitic
    Head- and dependent-marking in Semitic
    The function of case markers in Semitic
    Conclusions
    Bibliography
    Indexes of names and subjects

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