Description
Book SynopsisProvides a linguistically accurate written record of the endangered Upper Tanana language. Serving as a descriptive grammar of the Upper Tanana language, the book meticulously details a language that is currently fluently spoken by approximately fifty people in limited parts of Alaska's eastern interior and Canada's Yukon Territory.
Trade Review“
A Grammar of Upper Tanana, Volume 1 moves an already high bar for work on Dene languages even higher with its in-depth coverage of the standard topics enhanced by sections on the semantics of various morphemes, interjections, and nonverbal predicates. It is an outstanding contribution to the understanding of this language.”—Keren Rice, former president of both the Canadian Linguistic Association and the Linguistic Society of America
Table of ContentsList of Tables
List of Figures
List of Maps
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Preface
I Background
1 About this grammar
2 About Upper Tanana
3 Dialects
4 Some cultural background
II Phonology
5 Consonants
6 Vowels
7 Tone
8 A historical perspective on the sound system
9 Stem-initial fricative lenition
10 Syllable structure
11 Light and heavy stems
12 The practical orthography
III Lexical categories
13 Nouns
14 Verbs
15 Free postpositions
16 Adverbs
17 Directionals
18 Adjectives and modifiers
19 Pronouns
20 Numerals
21 Other minor word categories
IV Morphology
22 Possessor inflection
23 Inflection of postpositions
24 Verbal morphology: An overview
25 Verb theme categories
26 Verb stem
27 Voice/valence markers
28 Subject marking
29 Conjugation and mode prefixes
30 Qualifiers
31 Pronominal prefixes
32 Distributive prefix
33 Incorporated roots
34 Iterative prefix
35 Adverbial-derivational prefixes
36 Bound postpositions
37 Verbal suffixes
References