03699nam 2200433 450 991082416740332120230809223843.0(CKB)3710000001178982(MiAaPQ)EBC4843554(DLC) 2017018864(EXLCZ)99371000000117898220170510h20172017 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierDevelopment of tense/aspect in Semitic in the context of Afro-Asiatic languages /Vit BubenikAmsterdam, [Netherlands] ;Philadelphia, [Pennsylvania] :John Benjamins Publishing Company,2017.©20171 online resource (250 pages) illustrations, tablesCurrent Issues in Linguistic Theory,0304-0763 ;Volume 337Includes bibliographical references and indexes.List of figures and tables -- Abbreviations -- Preface -- Foreword -- Theoretical framework -- Chapter 1. Afro-Asiatic (Hamito-Semitic) languages -- Chapter 2. Semitic aspectual and diathetic systems -- Chapter 3. Central and South Semitic -- Chapter 4. Reconstructing Proto-Semitic aspectual and diathetic system -- Chapter 5. Berber aspectual and diathetic system -- Chapter 6. Cushitic aspectual and diathetic system -- Chapter 7. Old egyptian aspectual and diathetic system -- Chapter 8. Chadic aspectual and diathetic system -- Chapter 9. Reconstructing the proto-afro-asiatic aspectual and diathetic system -- Chapter 10. Typology and universals of tense and aspect -- Postscript -- References -- Index of authors -- Subject indexThe author applies the comparative method for the reconstruction of earlier aspectual systems in the Afro-Asiatic phylum of languages. Moving ‘upstream’ from the documented systems of Semitic, Berber and Old Cushitic the state of affairs during the common stage of Proto-Semito-Berbero-Cushitic is reconstructed. With the addition of Egyptian and Chadic data important conclusions regarding the elusive Proto-Afro-Asiatic are reached. Moving ‘downstream’ the trajectory of individual aspectual systems through their later stages is analyzed. A central piece of the monograph is the reconstruction of intermediate stages reflecting the long-term developments of aspectual and temporal categories of individual languages from the Old towards their Middle periods. The continuity and innovation in the aspectual systems towards the contemporary state of affairs in analytic (serial) constructions of Modern Aramaic and Arabic vernacular languages is explicated. The author demonstrates that it is imperative to work in a larger typological framework and that in the field of Afro-Asiatic linguistics valuable insights can be gained from the study of parallel phenomena in Indo-European languages. At the same time, Indo-Europeanists will profit from the study of typologically earlier aspect-prominent systems of Afro-Asiatic languages. The monograph offers important contributions to our understanding of universals and to the typology and diachrony of tense and aspect.Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science.Series IV,Current issues in linguistic theory ;Volume 337.Semitic languagesVerbSemitic languagesTenseSemitic languagesVerb.Semitic languagesTense.492Bubeník Vít1942-172634MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910824167403321Development of tense4085018UNINA