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Author Hofling, Charles Andrew.

Title Itzaj Maya grammar / Charles Andrew Hofling with Félix Fernando Tesucún.

Publication Info. Salt Lake City : University of Utah Press, [2000]
©2000

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Description 1 online resource (pxvii, 596 pages)
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 593-596).
Contents 1. Phonology 1 -- 1.1. Phonemic Inventory and Orthography 2 -- 1.2. Stress, Juncture, and Pause 6 -- 1.3. Phonological Processes 8 -- 1.4. Phonotactics 25 -- 1.5. Spanish Loan Words 33 -- Morphology 34 -- 2. Person Markers and Pronouns 35 -- 2.1. Person Markers (Dependent Pronouns): Set A and Set B 35 -- 2.2. Independent Pronouns 39 -- 3. Verbal Complex 43 -- 3.1. Tense, Aspect, Mood, and Status 44 -- 3.2. Verb Root Classes 52 -- 3.3. Verb Derivation and Voice 55 -- 3.4. Sensory and Cognitive Verbs 75 -- 3.5. Verb Compounds 76 -- 4. Nominal Morphology 85 -- 4.1. Noun Roots 87 -- 4.2. Nominal Derivation 103 -- 4.3. Nominal Inflection and Modification 117 -- 4.4. Compound Nouns 120 -- 4.5. Noun Phrases 130 -- 4.6. Locative Expressions 136 -- 5. Numerals and Numeral Classifiers 141 -- 5.1. Numerals 141 -- 5.2. Numeral Classifiers 142 -- 5.3. Affixation on Numeral Classifier and Noun Compounds 145 -- 5.4. Numeral Classifier Compounds 146 -- 6. Adjectives, Adverbs, and Participles 147 -- 6.1. Adjectives 148 -- 6.2. Adverbs 158 -- 6.3. Participles 165 -- 6.4. Adjective and Adverb Compounds 173 -- 6.5. Intensifiers 179 -- 6.6. Quantifiers 179 -- 6.7. Plural Marking 179 -- 7. Particles and Exclamations 181 -- 7.1. Nominal 181 -- 7.2. Locative 182 -- 7.3. Prepositions 182 -- 7.4. Manner and Intensity 182 -- 7.5. Temporal 183 -- 7.6. Modal-epistemic 184 -- 7.7. Negative 185 -- 7.8. Interrogative/Relative 186 -- 7.9. Conjunctions and Subordinators 188 -- 7.10. Exclamatory Words 189 -- Morphosyntax, Syntax, and Discourse -- 8. Typological Overview 190 -- 8.1. Order of Major Constituents 190 -- 8.2. Modifier + Modified Order 196 -- 8.3. Modified + Modifier Order 198 -- 8.4. Prepositional Phrases 200 -- 8.5. Adverbs 200 -- 8.6. Stative, Existential, and Equational Constructions 202 -- 8.7. Interrogation 203 -- 8.8. Negation 203 -- 9. Nominal Morphosyntax 205 -- 9.2. Unmodified Nouns 206 -- 9.3. Noun Classifiers 207 -- 9.4. Proper Nouns, Titles, and Honorifics 214 -- 9.5. Numerals and Numeral Classifiers 219 -- 9.6. Plurals 227 -- 9.7. Adjectives 234 -- 9.8. Determiner a' 247 -- 9.9. Topic Marker -e' 249 -- 9.10. Partitive Marker -i'ij 251 -- 9.11. Contrastive Focus 252 -- 9.12. Demonstrative Adjectives 253 -- 10. Possession 255 -- 10.1. Unmarked Possessive Constructions 255 -- 10.2. Marked Possessive Constructions 262 -- 10.3. Existential Constructions with yaan 286 -- 11. Pronouns in Discourse 288 -- 11.1. Repetition and Redundancy of Pronominal Information 288 -- 11.2. Information Flow, Reference Tracking, and Discourse Highlighting 288 -- 11.3. Indirect Object Pronouns 295 -- 11.4. Independent Possessive Pronouns 298 -- 11.5. Demonstrative Pronouns 299 -- 12. Locatives 303 -- 12.1. Distal Locatives 303 -- 12.2. Proximal Locative 308 -- 12.3. Ostensive Demonstratives 310 -- 12.4. Locative Prepositions 310 -- 13. Prepositions and Prepositional Phrases 312 -- 13.1. Sentential Position 312 -- 13.2. Basic Prepositions: PREP + NP 313 -- 13.3. ti' + Relational Noun 326 -- 13.4. Preposition (/Relational Noun) ti'ij NP 327 -- 14. Adverbials 329 -- 14.1. Sentential Position 329 -- 14.2. Temporal Adverbs 329 -- 14.3. Manner Adverbs 338 -- 14.4. Modal-Epistemic Adverbs 344 -- 14.5. Adverbial Focus with -ik-il [similar] -ik [similar] -il 352 -- 15. Verbal Morphosyntax I: Tense, Aspect, and Mood 356 -- 15.1. Tense-Aspect-Mood 356 -- 15.2. Incompletive Status 357 -- 15.3. Completive Aspect and Status 367 -- 15.4. Irrealis Modalities 371 -- 15.5. Adverbial Incorporation 382 -- 16. Verbal Morphosyntax II: Transitivity and Voice 384 -- 16.1. Transitive vs. Intransitive 384 -- 16.2. Active Transitive 384 -- 16.3. Intransitive Voices 386 -- 16.4.a Topicality and Clause Linkage 399 -- 17. Statives and Equational Constructions 401 -- 17.1. Statives 401 -- 17.2. Stative + Nominal 402 -- 17.3. Nominal + Stative 403 -- 17.4. Comparative Constructions 405 -- 17.5. Contrastive-Focus Constructions 407 -- 17.6. Existential yaan 407 -- 18. Interrogation 418 -- 18.1. Intonation 418 -- 18.2. Yes-No Questions 420 -- 18.3. Interrogative-Word Questions 421 -- 18.4. Interrogative Focus and Scope 428 -- 19. Negation 432 -- 19.1. General Negative ma' 432 -- 19.2. (mix) ... mix, '(neither) ... nor' 440 -- 19.3. Negative Focus and Scope 442 -- Complex Sentences -- 20. Coordination 445 -- 20.1. Parataxis 445 -- 20.2. Morphosyntactically-marked Coordination 447 -- 21. Conditional Clauses 460 -- 21.1. Affirmative Conditional 460 -- 21.2. Negative Conditional: waj ma' (...-e') 462 -- 21.3. Counterfactual Conditional: waj V Kuchij (...-e') 464 -- 21.4. Conditional with ka'ax ...-e', 'even if' 466 -- 22. Relative Clauses 468 -- 22.1. Nonrestrictive Relative Clauses 468 -- 22.2. Restrictive Relative Clauses 469 -- 22.3. Reduced Relative Clauses 482 -- 22.4. Contrastive-focus Constructions 483 -- 23. Complements 486 -- 23.1. Subject Complements 486 -- 23.2. Object Complements 488 -- 24. Adverbial Clauses 508 -- 24.1. Temporal Adverbial Clauses 508 -- 24.2. Manner Adverbial Clauses 521 -- 24.3. Subordination with Intransitive Matrix Verbs and Statives 523 -- 24.4. Purpose Clauses 526 -- 25. Style and Poetics 535 -- 25.1. Sound Symbolism and Sound Play 535 -- 25.2. Parallelism and Repetition 539 -- 25.3. Quoted Speech and Dialogic Repetition 543 -- 25.4. Discourse Unit Boundaries 551 -- 25.5. Discourse Genres 558 -- 25.4. Cultural Schemata 559 -- Appendix Texts 561 -- Text 1. Yellow Crocodile, the Man-eater 562 -- Text 2. Bandits (Wit's) 579.
Note Print version record.
Access Use copy Restrictions unspecified star MiAaHDL
Reproduction Electronic reproduction. [S.l.] : HathiTrust Digital Library, 2010. MiAaHDL
System Details Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
Processing Action digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Summary "The Itzaj Maya language is a member of the Yukatekan Maya language family spoken in the lowlands of Guatemala, Mexico, and Belize, a family that includes Maya, Mopan, and Lakantun. Many Classic Maya hieroglyphic texts were written in an earlier form of these languages, as were a number of important colonial documents. In addition to being a valuable record of an ancient language, Itzaj Maya Grammar contributes greatly to the study of these older documents."--BOOK JACKET. Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Incorporated All Rights Reserved.
Subject Itzá dialect -- Guatemala -- Puerto San José -- Grammar.
Itzá dialect -- Guatemala -- Puerto San José -- Morphology.
Language and languages.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY -- Native American Languages.
Maya (taalfamilie)
Grammatik.
Itzá-Sprache.
Added Author Tesucún, Félix Fernando.
Other Form: Print version: Hofling, Charles Andrew. Itzaj Maya grammar. Salt Lake City : University of Utah Press, ©2000 0874806666 (DLC) 00042314 (OCoLC)44162589
ISBN 9781607812180 (electronic bk.)
1607812185 (electronic bk.)
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