Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature
Though mainland and insular Southeast Asia may be thought of in many ways as constituting a single regional entity — unified by common geographical conditions and by centuries of commercial and cultural contact — the languages of these two adjacent areas would appear, on the face of it, to have very...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1792112024-07-24T07:46:23Z Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature Oey, Eric M. University of California, Berkeley Arts and Humanities Though mainland and insular Southeast Asia may be thought of in many ways as constituting a single regional entity — unified by common geographical conditions and by centuries of commercial and cultural contact — the languages of these two adjacent areas would appear, on the face of it, to have very little In common with each other. Indeed, typologically. they could hardly be more different — the languages of "Indochina" being predominantly (though not exclusively) isolating, monosyllabic (or tending to monosyllabicity) and tonal, whereas those of the "Malay Archipelago are polysyllabic, agglutinating and non-tonal. On this basis alone, it has always been assumed that they belong to entirely distinct stocks, with only marginal regional overlap. Published version 2024-07-24T07:46:23Z 2024-07-24T07:46:23Z 1990 Journal Article Oey, E. M. (1990). Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 13(1), 141-158. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LTBA.13.1.07 0731-3500 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179211 10.32655/LTBA.13.1.07 1 13 141 158 en Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area © 1990 The Editor(s). All rights reserved. application/pdf |
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Though mainland and insular Southeast Asia may be thought of in many ways as constituting a single regional entity — unified by common geographical conditions and by centuries of commercial and cultural contact — the languages of these two adjacent areas would appear, on the face of it, to have very little In common with each other. Indeed, typologically. they could hardly be more different — the languages of "Indochina" being predominantly (though not exclusively) isolating, monosyllabic (or tending to monosyllabicity) and tonal, whereas those of the "Malay Archipelago are polysyllabic, agglutinating and non-tonal. On this basis alone, it has always been assumed that they belong to entirely distinct stocks, with only marginal regional overlap. |
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University of California, Berkeley |
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University of California, Berkeley Oey, Eric M. |
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Article |
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Oey, Eric M. |
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Oey, Eric M. |
title |
Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature |
title_short |
Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature |
title_full |
Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature |
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Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature |
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Psycho-collocations' in Malay: a Southeast Asian areal feature |
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psycho-collocations' in malay: a southeast asian areal feature |
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2024 |
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