查詢結果分析
相關文獻
- 漢藏語言的語音研究和問題
- 從漢藏語的比較看上古漢語的詞頭問題
- An Extrusional Approach to *p-/w- Variation in Sino-Tibetan
- 上古漢語與原始漢藏語帶r與l複聲母的構擬
- Sources of Middle Chinese Manner Types: Old Chinese Prenasalized Initials in Hmong-Mien and Sino-Tibetan Perspective
- 美亞的文化關聯:一些個人的回憶、假設與例證
- 漢藏語言的研究和問題
- 漢藏語言研究導論
- Complementation in Caodeng rGyalrong
- 百年來的語言學
頁籤選單縮合
題 名 | An Extrusional Approach to *p-/w- Variation in Sino-Tibetan |
---|---|
作 者 | Matisoff, James A.; | 書刊名 | 語言暨語言學 |
卷 期 | 1:2 2000.07[民89.07] |
頁 次 | 頁135-186 |
分類號 | 802.931 |
關鍵詞 | 漢藏語; Extrusional; Sino-tibetan; Labial stop; Labial semivowel; |
語 文 | 英文(English) |
英文摘要 | There are a surprisingly large number of Tibeto-Burman [TB] and Sino-Tibetan [ST] roots that show interchange between a labial stop and the labial semivowel /w/. These are not regular correspondences, where a given language consistently has a stop, while another consistently has a w. Neither can the distribution of stop vs. semivowel reflexes be correlated very neatly with particular subgroups of TB. Certain subgroups, notably Qiangic and Kamarupan, are split down the middle, with stop and semivowel reflexes equally common and distributed randomly. Naxi, genetically quite close to Loloish, usually has stops, while Loloish itself favors semivowels. Some languages (e.g. Lepcha) have doublet formations, with both stop and semivowel allofams descending from the same etymon. This phenomenon has been one of the most vexatious in TB comparison, and it is clear that Benedict was never satisfied with any of the many ‘explanations’, often mutually contradictory, that are offered in the text and notes of STC. In this paper I try to sharpen the theoretical issues involved in choosing one line of explanation over another, opting eventually for an ‘extrusional’ analysis. |
本系統中英文摘要資訊取自各篇刊載內容。