This book provides a clear and comprehensive description of the Ocotepec/Tapalapa variant of Chiapas Zoque. Zoque is one of the two major branches of the Mixe-Zoquean language family, spoken in the southern part of Mexico. Until the Spanish conquest in the sixteenth century the Mixe-Zoquean languages covered a large area from Veracruz on the Gulf coast to the border of Guatemala and the Pacific coast. Inscriptions in Zoque from the first half of the first millennium AD are the oldest known linguistic documents in Mesoamerica.The Zoquean area once included the entire heartland of the Olmecs, who almost certainly spoke a proto-Zoquean or proto-Mixe-Zoquean language. The Zoques are thus the most likely direct descendents of the oldest known civilization of Mexico. As a result of a long history of close contact, Zoque and Mayan share areal features, and there are lexical borrowings in both directions, but genetically and typologically they are clearly distinct. The Zoque-speaking area has shrunk considerably since pre-colonial times. In 1982 an eruption from the volcano Chichonal destroyed a central part of the Zoque core area and caused a mass migration of Zoque speakers to parts of Mexico where Spanish is the dominant language. This record of an unusual and critically endangered language will be a vital resource for linguists of all theoretical persuasions.
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This book provides a description of Chiapas Zoque, the language of the descendents of Mexico's oldest known civilization and whose inscriptions are the oldest known linguistic documents in Mesoamerica. This record of an unusual, vibrant, but critically endangered language will be an important resource for linguists of all theoretical persuasions.
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1. The Zoque Language ; 2. Phonology ; 3. Morphological Processes ; 4. The Noun ; 5. Determiners and Modifiers ; 6. Pronouns ; 7. The Verb ; 8. The Sentence ; 9. Subordination ; Bibliography
The first comprehensive description of the language Based on fieldwork among people, young and old, who use the langauge on a daily basis Typologically interesting and unusual Sheds new perspectives on linguistic theory
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Jan Terje Faarlund is Professor of Linguistics and coordinator of research at the Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature, University of Oslo. Before this he was Professor of Linguistics and Norwegian Studies at the University of Chicago, where he remains a research associate. His research interests and publications are mainly in the fields of Scandinavian languages, historical syntax, syntactic theory, language and evolution, and Meso-American languages. His books include Syntactic Change. Towards a Theory of Historical Syntax. Berlin (De Gruyter Mouton 1990) and The Syntax of Old Norse (OUP, 2004).
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The first comprehensive description of the language Based on fieldwork among people, young and old, who use the langauge on a daily basis Typologically interesting and unusual Sheds new perspectives on linguistic theory
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199693214
Publisert
2012
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
192

Forfatter

Biographical note

Jan Terje Faarlund is Professor of Linguistics and coordinator of research at the Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature, University of Oslo. Before this he was Professor of Linguistics and Norwegian Studies at the University of Chicago, where he remains a research associate. His research interests and publications are mainly in the fields of Scandinavian languages, historical syntax, syntactic theory, language and evolution, and Meso-American languages. His books include Syntactic Change. Towards a Theory of Historical Syntax. Berlin (De Gruyter Mouton 1990) and The Syntax of Old Norse (OUP, 2004).