Mood and aspect in Karang

The paper describes the formal and semantic properties of the mood and aspect categories of the Adamawa language, Karang. Three inherent aspect verb classes are established--events, processes, and states--on the basis of semantic and morphological distinctions. A fundamental opposition of the mood-a...

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Autor principal: Edward H. Ubels
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
FR
Publicado: LibraryPress@UF 1983
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/53182366cdd54fa6a1d38fb93b600451
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:53182366cdd54fa6a1d38fb93b6004512021-11-19T03:55:44ZMood and aspect in Karang10.32473/sal.v14i1.1075350039-35332154-428Xhttps://doaj.org/article/53182366cdd54fa6a1d38fb93b6004511983-04-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journals.flvc.org/sal/article/view/107535https://doaj.org/toc/0039-3533https://doaj.org/toc/2154-428XThe paper describes the formal and semantic properties of the mood and aspect categories of the Adamawa language, Karang. Three inherent aspect verb classes are established--events, processes, and states--on the basis of semantic and morphological distinctions. A fundamental opposition of the mood-aspect system is between factive and non-factive moods, which distinguish actual and potential situations. Non-factive mood is formally indicated by a high tone and subdivides into the categories subjunctive, predictive, and nonpredictive. Verbo-nominals are marked as non-factive. The formal categories of aspect are progressive, habitual, perfect, and nonperfect. When inherent and formal aspect categories with semantically contradictory components are combined, inherent aspect is overriden. The perfective meaning of the perfect category also overrides the imperfective meaning of the progressive.Edward H. UbelsLibraryPress@UFarticlemoodaspectAdamawaKarangsemanticsPhilology. LinguisticsP1-1091ENFRStudies in African Linguistics, Vol 14, Iss 1 (1983)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FR
topic mood
aspect
Adamawa
Karang
semantics
Philology. Linguistics
P1-1091
spellingShingle mood
aspect
Adamawa
Karang
semantics
Philology. Linguistics
P1-1091
Edward H. Ubels
Mood and aspect in Karang
description The paper describes the formal and semantic properties of the mood and aspect categories of the Adamawa language, Karang. Three inherent aspect verb classes are established--events, processes, and states--on the basis of semantic and morphological distinctions. A fundamental opposition of the mood-aspect system is between factive and non-factive moods, which distinguish actual and potential situations. Non-factive mood is formally indicated by a high tone and subdivides into the categories subjunctive, predictive, and nonpredictive. Verbo-nominals are marked as non-factive. The formal categories of aspect are progressive, habitual, perfect, and nonperfect. When inherent and formal aspect categories with semantically contradictory components are combined, inherent aspect is overriden. The perfective meaning of the perfect category also overrides the imperfective meaning of the progressive.
format article
author Edward H. Ubels
author_facet Edward H. Ubels
author_sort Edward H. Ubels
title Mood and aspect in Karang
title_short Mood and aspect in Karang
title_full Mood and aspect in Karang
title_fullStr Mood and aspect in Karang
title_full_unstemmed Mood and aspect in Karang
title_sort mood and aspect in karang
publisher LibraryPress@UF
publishDate 1983
url https://doaj.org/article/53182366cdd54fa6a1d38fb93b600451
work_keys_str_mv AT edwardhubels moodandaspectinkarang
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