A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation

Relations between verb classes and syntactic alternations have been studied in many languages, but not Malay. This study discusses whether Malay ‘say’ verbs function like English ‘say’ verbs when undergoing the ‘as’ alternation. 111 Malay speakers aged between 18 and 25 performed two online tasks. I...

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Main Author: Siti Nur Atiqah Abdul Had
Other Authors: Francis Bond
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73495
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-734952019-12-10T12:08:04Z A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation Siti Nur Atiqah Abdul Had Francis Bond School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities Relations between verb classes and syntactic alternations have been studied in many languages, but not Malay. This study discusses whether Malay ‘say’ verbs function like English ‘say’ verbs when undergoing the ‘as’ alternation. 111 Malay speakers aged between 18 and 25 performed two online tasks. In the first task, permutations of 10 Malay ‘say’ verbs and 2 alternants of the ‘as’ alternation were presented, and participants determined the acceptability of each sentence. In the second task, participants assigned the same ‘say’ verbs to 5 categories according to their meaning. Results showed that Malay and English ‘say’ verbs do not have the same semantic meaning when translated directly. Also, Malay verbs that are semantically like one another may not undergo the ‘as’ alternation the same way. Lastly, Malay verbs that are semantically like their English translations may not undergo the ‘as’ alternation the same way either. It is hoped that the study encourages native speakers to appreciate the Malay language more after understanding the finer nuances that even closely-related words have. The semantic and syntactic differences identified are also useful for English speakers who are learning Malay. Future studies can look at other verb classes and syntactic alternations that have yet to be explored. Bachelor of Arts 2018-03-22T05:28:05Z 2018-03-22T05:28:05Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73495 en Nanyang Technological University 40 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Siti Nur Atiqah Abdul Had
A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation
description Relations between verb classes and syntactic alternations have been studied in many languages, but not Malay. This study discusses whether Malay ‘say’ verbs function like English ‘say’ verbs when undergoing the ‘as’ alternation. 111 Malay speakers aged between 18 and 25 performed two online tasks. In the first task, permutations of 10 Malay ‘say’ verbs and 2 alternants of the ‘as’ alternation were presented, and participants determined the acceptability of each sentence. In the second task, participants assigned the same ‘say’ verbs to 5 categories according to their meaning. Results showed that Malay and English ‘say’ verbs do not have the same semantic meaning when translated directly. Also, Malay verbs that are semantically like one another may not undergo the ‘as’ alternation the same way. Lastly, Malay verbs that are semantically like their English translations may not undergo the ‘as’ alternation the same way either. It is hoped that the study encourages native speakers to appreciate the Malay language more after understanding the finer nuances that even closely-related words have. The semantic and syntactic differences identified are also useful for English speakers who are learning Malay. Future studies can look at other verb classes and syntactic alternations that have yet to be explored.
author2 Francis Bond
author_facet Francis Bond
Siti Nur Atiqah Abdul Had
format Final Year Project
author Siti Nur Atiqah Abdul Had
author_sort Siti Nur Atiqah Abdul Had
title A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation
title_short A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation
title_full A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation
title_fullStr A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of Malay and English ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation
title_sort comparative study of malay and english ‘say’ verbs and ‘as’ alternation
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73495
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