丹尼-叶尼塞语的词法

E. Vajda
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Both families are typologically unusual in having a strongly prefixing verb and nominal possessive prefixes, but postpositions rather than prepositions. The finite verb arose from the amalgamation of an auxiliary and a main verb, both with its own agreement prefixes and tense-mood-aspect suffixes, creating a rigid, mostly prefixing template. The word-final suffixes largely elided in Yeniseian but merged with the ancient verb root in Na-Dene to create a series of allophones called stem sets. Na-Dene innovated a unique complex of verb prefixes called “classifiers” on the basis of certain inherited agreement and tense-mood-aspect markers; all of these morphemes have cognates in Yeniseian, where they did not innovate into a single complex. Metathesis and reanalysis of old morphological material is quite prevalent in the most ancient core verb morphology of both families, while new prefixal or suffixal slots added onto the verb’s periphery represent innovations that distinguish the individual daughter branches within each family. Other shared Dene-Yeniseian morphology includes possessive constructions, directional words, and an intricate formula for deriving action nominals from finite verb stems.\n Yeniseian languages have been strongly affected by the exclusively suffixing languages brought north to Siberia by reindeer breeders during the past two millennia. In modern Ket the originally prefixing verb has largely become suffixing, and possessive prefixes have evolved into clitics that prefer to attach to any available preceding word. Na-Dene languages were likewise influenced by traits prevalent across the Americas. Athabaskan, for example, developed a system of obviation in third-person agreement marking and elaborated an array of distinct verb forms reflecting the shape, animacy, number, or consistency of transitive object or intransitive subject. Features motivated by language contact differ between Tlingit, Eyak, and Athabaskan, suggesting they arose after the breakup of Na-Dene, as the various branches spread across northwestern North America.\n The study of Dene-Yeniseian morphology contributes to historical-comparative linguistics, contact linguistics, and also to the diachronic study of complex morphology. In particular, comparing Yeniseian and Na-Dene verb structure reveals the prominence of metathesis and reanalysis in processes of language change. 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引用次数: 3

摘要

Dene-Yeniseian是一个假定的科,由两个分支组成:西伯利亚中部的Yeniseian和北美西北部的Na-Dene (Tlingit-Eyak-Athabaskan)。叶尼塞语只包含一个现存的代表语言Ket,以及已经灭绝的Yugh、Kott、Assan、Arin和Pumpokol语言。Na-Dene包含主要在阿拉斯加狭长地带使用的特林吉特语,以及第二个分支,它在最近灭绝的阿拉斯加沿海的Eyak语和广泛分布的Athabaskan亚家族之间相等,后者最初包含40多种不同的语言,其中一些现在已经灭绝。阿萨巴斯坎语曾经在阿拉斯加内陆(德纳纳、科育空)和加拿大西北部的大部分地区(奴尔、威苏威恩、苏伊纳)使用,在加利福尼亚(胡帕)、俄勒冈(托洛瓦)、华盛顿(夸里奥夸-克拉茨科尼)和美国西南部(纳瓦霍、阿帕奇)也有飞地。这两个语系在类型学上都不寻常,因为它们都有强烈的前缀动词和名义所有格前缀,但都是后置而不是介词。有限动词由助动词和主动词合并而来,两者都有自己的协议前缀和时态-语气-语气后缀,形成了一个刚性的,主要是前缀的模板。叶尼塞语的词尾后缀在很大程度上被省略了,但与Na-Dene语中古老的动词词根合并,形成了一系列被称为词干集的音素。Na-Dene在继承了一定的一致性和时态-语气-情态标记的基础上创造了一种独特的动词前缀复合体,称为“分类词”;所有这些语素在叶尼塞语中都有同源词,它们在叶尼塞语中并没有形成一个单一的复合体。在这两科最古老的核心动词形态中,对旧形态材料的重新分析相当普遍,而在动词外围添加的新前缀或后缀槽代表了区分每个科中单个子分支的创新。其他共享的dene - yenisian词法包括所有格结构、指向性词和从有限动词词根派生动作名词的复杂公式。叶尼塞语在过去两千年里受到驯鹿饲养者带到西伯利亚北部的独有后缀语言的强烈影响。在现代英语中,原本用作前缀的动词在很大程度上变成了后缀,所有格前缀也演变成了附加在任何可用的前一个词上的限定词。纳德尼语也同样受到了美洲各地普遍存在的特征的影响。例如,阿萨巴斯坎(Athabaskan)在第三人称协议标记中发展了一套排除系统,并详细阐述了一系列不同的动词形式,这些形式反映了及物宾语或不及物主语的形状、活力、数量或一致性。由于语言接触而产生的特征在特林吉特人、埃亚克人和阿萨巴斯坎人之间有所不同,这表明它们是在纳德尼人分裂之后出现的,当时各种分支在北美西北部蔓延。dene - yenisseian形态学的研究有助于历史比较语言学、接触语言学以及复杂形态学的历时研究。通过对叶尼塞语和纳德尼语动词结构的比较,我们可以发现,在语言变化过程中,复元和再分析的作用尤为突出。Dene-Yeniseian不仅因为其广泛的地理分布和语言接触对每个独立家庭的影响而值得注意,而且因为有机会追踪不常见的形态结构的演变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Morphology in Dene-Yeniseian Languages
Dene-Yeniseian is a putative family consisting of two branches: Yeniseian in central Siberia and Na-Dene (Tlingit-Eyak-Athabaskan) in northwestern North America. Yeniseian contains a single living representative, Ket, as well as the extinct Yugh, Kott, Assan, Arin, and Pumpokol languages. Na-Dene contains Tlingit, spoken mainly in the Alaskan Panhandle, and a second branch divided equidistantly between the recently extinct Eyak language of coastal Alaska and the widespread Athabaskan subfamily, which originally contained more than 40 distinct languages, some now extinct. Athabaskan was once spoken throughout interior Alaska (Dena’ina, Koyukon) and most of northwestern Canada (Slave, Witsuwit’en, Tsuut’ina), with enclaves in California (Hupa), Oregon (Tolowa), Washington (Kwalhioqua-Clatskanie), and the American Southwest (Navajo, Apache). Both families are typologically unusual in having a strongly prefixing verb and nominal possessive prefixes, but postpositions rather than prepositions. The finite verb arose from the amalgamation of an auxiliary and a main verb, both with its own agreement prefixes and tense-mood-aspect suffixes, creating a rigid, mostly prefixing template. The word-final suffixes largely elided in Yeniseian but merged with the ancient verb root in Na-Dene to create a series of allophones called stem sets. Na-Dene innovated a unique complex of verb prefixes called “classifiers” on the basis of certain inherited agreement and tense-mood-aspect markers; all of these morphemes have cognates in Yeniseian, where they did not innovate into a single complex. Metathesis and reanalysis of old morphological material is quite prevalent in the most ancient core verb morphology of both families, while new prefixal or suffixal slots added onto the verb’s periphery represent innovations that distinguish the individual daughter branches within each family. Other shared Dene-Yeniseian morphology includes possessive constructions, directional words, and an intricate formula for deriving action nominals from finite verb stems. Yeniseian languages have been strongly affected by the exclusively suffixing languages brought north to Siberia by reindeer breeders during the past two millennia. In modern Ket the originally prefixing verb has largely become suffixing, and possessive prefixes have evolved into clitics that prefer to attach to any available preceding word. Na-Dene languages were likewise influenced by traits prevalent across the Americas. Athabaskan, for example, developed a system of obviation in third-person agreement marking and elaborated an array of distinct verb forms reflecting the shape, animacy, number, or consistency of transitive object or intransitive subject. Features motivated by language contact differ between Tlingit, Eyak, and Athabaskan, suggesting they arose after the breakup of Na-Dene, as the various branches spread across northwestern North America. The study of Dene-Yeniseian morphology contributes to historical-comparative linguistics, contact linguistics, and also to the diachronic study of complex morphology. In particular, comparing Yeniseian and Na-Dene verb structure reveals the prominence of metathesis and reanalysis in processes of language change. Dene-Yeniseian is noteworthy not only for its wide geographic spread and for the effects of language contact on each separate family, but also for the opportunity to trace the evolution of uncommon morphological structures.
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