The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze

Numeral-plus-classifier phrases have relatively complex tone patterns in Naxi, Na (a.k.a. Mosuo) and Laze (a.k.a. Shuitian). These tone patterns have structural similarities across the three languages. Among the numerals from ‘1’ to ‘10’, three pairs emerge: ‘1’ and ‘2’ always have the same to...

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Main Author: Michaud, Alexis
Other Authors: LACITO-CNRS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177699
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1776992024-06-03T07:05:30Z The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze Michaud, Alexis LACITO-CNRS Arts and Humanities Tone Numerals Numeral-plus-classifier phrases have relatively complex tone patterns in Naxi, Na (a.k.a. Mosuo) and Laze (a.k.a. Shuitian). These tone patterns have structural similarities across the three languages. Among the numerals from ‘1’ to ‘10’, three pairs emerge: ‘1’ and ‘2’ always have the same tonal behaviour; likewise, ‘4’ and ‘5’ share the same tone patterns, as do ‘6’ and ‘8’. Even those tone patterns that are irregular in view of the synchronic phonology of the languages at issue are no exception to the structural identity within these three pairs of numerals. These pairs also behave identically in numerals from ‘11’ to ‘99’ and above, e.g. ‘16’ and ‘18’ share the same tone pattern. In view of the paucity of irregular morphology—and indeed of morphological alternations in general—in these languages, these structural properties appear interesting for phylogenetic research. The identical behaviour of these pairs of numerals originates in morpho phonological properties that they shared at least as early as the stage preceding the separation of Naxi, Na and Laze, referred to as the Proto-Naish stage. Although no reconstruction can be proposed as yet for these shared properties, it is argued that they provide a hint concerning the phylogenetic closeness of the three languages. Published version 2024-06-03T07:05:30Z 2024-06-03T07:05:30Z 2011 Journal Article Michaud, A. (2011). The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 34(1), 1-26. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LTBA.34.1.01 0731-3500 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177699 10.32655/LTBA.34.1.01 1 34 1 26 en Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area © 2011 The Editor(s). All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Arts and Humanities
Tone
Numerals
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
Tone
Numerals
Michaud, Alexis
The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze
description Numeral-plus-classifier phrases have relatively complex tone patterns in Naxi, Na (a.k.a. Mosuo) and Laze (a.k.a. Shuitian). These tone patterns have structural similarities across the three languages. Among the numerals from ‘1’ to ‘10’, three pairs emerge: ‘1’ and ‘2’ always have the same tonal behaviour; likewise, ‘4’ and ‘5’ share the same tone patterns, as do ‘6’ and ‘8’. Even those tone patterns that are irregular in view of the synchronic phonology of the languages at issue are no exception to the structural identity within these three pairs of numerals. These pairs also behave identically in numerals from ‘11’ to ‘99’ and above, e.g. ‘16’ and ‘18’ share the same tone pattern. In view of the paucity of irregular morphology—and indeed of morphological alternations in general—in these languages, these structural properties appear interesting for phylogenetic research. The identical behaviour of these pairs of numerals originates in morpho phonological properties that they shared at least as early as the stage preceding the separation of Naxi, Na and Laze, referred to as the Proto-Naish stage. Although no reconstruction can be proposed as yet for these shared properties, it is argued that they provide a hint concerning the phylogenetic closeness of the three languages.
author2 LACITO-CNRS
author_facet LACITO-CNRS
Michaud, Alexis
format Article
author Michaud, Alexis
author_sort Michaud, Alexis
title The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze
title_short The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze
title_full The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze
title_fullStr The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze
title_full_unstemmed The tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between Naxi, Na and Laze
title_sort tones of numerals and numeral-plus-classifier phrases: on structural similarities between naxi, na and laze
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177699
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