ISBN-13: 9783639227703 / Miękka / 2010 / 100 str.
This monograph takes Eza(Ezha)as its target language of discussion. In light of the absence of reliable syntactic description on the language, the researcher has taken over the task of describing some aspects of the language's syntax, the structure of nominal functors. The functional elements that go with nouns have first been identified and described in terms of their morphosyntactic behavior.Some functors are part of the nouns' morphology, while others are not. Within the category of functors that are part of the morphology of nouns, the associative plural morpheme, the gender marker, the accusative and vocative case markers, the possessive/genitive suffixes, the definite article and the focus marker have been investigated. The category of functors which are not part of the nouns' morphology includes: the indefinite article, pronominals, demonstratives, interrogatives, both specific and non-specific quantificational elements, classifier phrases and the nominal negator. Once the functors have been identified and described, they are then analyzed in terms of their syntactic derivations.
This monograph takes Eža(Ezha)as its target language of discussion. In light of the absence of reliable syntactic description on the language, the researcher has taken over the task of describing some aspects of the languages syntax, the structure of nominal functors. The functional elements that go with nouns have first been identified and described in terms of their morphosyntactic behavior.Some functors are part of the nouns morphology, while others are not. Within the category of functors that are part of the morphology of nouns, the associative plural morpheme, the gender marker, the accusative and vocative case markers, the possessive/genitive suffixes, the definite article and the focus marker have been investigated. The category of functors which are not part of the nouns morphology includes: the indefinite article, pronominals, demonstratives, interrogatives, both specific and non-specific quantificational elements, classifier phrases and the nominal negator. Once the functors have been identified and described, they are then analyzed in terms of their syntactic derivations.