• Deutsch
Login

Open Access

  • Home
  • Search
  • Browse
  • Publish
  • FAQ

Refine

Author

  • Fiedler, Ines (16)
  • Schwarz, Anne (8)
  • Reineke, Brigitte (3)
  • Endriss, Cornelia (1)
  • Götze, Michael (1)
  • Hartmann, Katharina (1)
  • Hinterwimmer, Stefan (1)
  • Jannedy, Stefanie (1)
  • Krifka, Manfred (1)
  • Petrova, Svetlana (1)
+ more

Year of publication

  • 2006 (8)
  • 2005 (2)
  • 2007 (2)
  • 1994 (1)
  • 1998 (1)
  • 2004 (1)
  • 2008 (1)

Document Type

  • Conference Proceeding (9)
  • Part of a Book (5)
  • Article (2)

Language

  • English (11)
  • German (5)

Has Fulltext

  • yes (16)

Is part of the Bibliography

  • no (16)

Keywords

  • Informationsstruktur (13)
  • Foodo (1)
  • conjunction (1)
  • ex-situ focus (1)
  • focus constructions (1)
  • focus marker (1)
  • focus types (1)
  • grammaticalization (1)
  • relative clause (1)
  • scope of focus (1)
+ more

16 search hits

  • 1 to 10
  • 10
  • 20
  • 50
  • 100

Sort by

  • Year
  • Year
  • Title
  • Title
  • Author
  • Author
Subject focus in West African languages : International Conference on Information Structure 6-8 June, 2006, University of Potsdam (2006)
Fiedler, Ines ; Hartmann, Katharina ; Reineke, Brigitte ; Schwarz, Anne ; Zimmermann, Malte
Focus expressions in Foodo (2006)
Fiedler, Ines
Prosodic focus marking in Ewe (2006)
Fiedler, Ines ; Jannedy, Stefanie
Focus expressions in Yom (2006)
Fiedler, Ines
This paper deals with the means for expressing the pragmatic category of focus in Yom, which is an Oti-Volta language of the Yom-Nawdem group spoken by about 74,000 people (Gordon 2005, online version) in the department of Donga in Northern Benin. The study is based on results of my field research carried out in March/April 2005 in Djougou (Benin), within the framework of the project “Focus in Gur and Kwa languages”. Main aim of this fieldwork was to study the expression of focus in Yom. Regarding the basic grammatical structure of the language, I mainly rely on various publications by Beacham (1969, 1991, and 1997).
Focus or narrative constructions? : Morphosyntactically marked focus constructions in some Gur and Kwa languages (2004)
Fiedler, Ines ; Schwarz, Anne
0. Introduction 1. Observations concerning the structure of morphosyntactically marked focus constructions 1.1 First observation: SF vs. NSF asymmetry 1.2 Second observation: NSF-NAR parallelism 1.3 Affirmative ex-situ focus constructions (SF, NSF), and narrative clauses (NAR) 2. Grammaticalization 2.1 Cleft hypothesis 2.2 Movement hypothesis 2.3 Narrative hypothesis 2.3.1 Back- or Foregrounding? 2.3.2 Converse directionality of FM and conjunction 3. Language specific analysis 4. Conclusionary remarks References
Focal aspects in the Lelemi verb system (2006)
Schwarz, Anne ; Fiedler, Ines
In our presentation we will outline the verb system of Lelemi and concentrate on certain “focal” aspects which are of primary interest to us. Lelemi has two TAMP paradigms: one constituting the so-called “simple tenses”, the other the so-called “relative tenses” (Allan 1973), although not every “simple tense” has a counterpart in the “relative tenses”. The simple paradigm is formed by subject prefixes (prefixed pronouns for 1st or 2nd person and noun class pronouns for 3rd persons) and the verb form whereas the relative paradigm is build up by the obligatory use of an external subject noun, an invariable verb prefix, and the verb form. While the simple paradigm is used in quite a lot of syntactic environments the relative paradigm only shows up in relative clauses with the subject being the head as well as in subject and sentence focus constructions including questions concerning the subject. We will show some interesting interactions between the grammatical expression of focus and the verb system and sketch the grammaticalisation path of the morpheme nà.
Focus expressions in Yom (2005)
Fiedler, Ines
Focus in Gur and Kwa (2006)
Fiedler, Ines ; Reineke, Brigitte ; Schwarz, Anne
The project investigates focus phenomena in the two genetically relatedWest African Gur and Kwa language groups of the Niger-Congo phylum. Most of its members are tone languages, they are similar with respect to word order typology (all are SVO languages), but of divergent morphological type (agglutinating Gur versus isolating Kwa).
Out-of-focus encoding in Gur and Kwa (2005)
Fiedler, Ines ; Schwarz, Anne
This paper investigates the structural properties of morphosyntactically marked focus constructions, focussing on the often neglected non-focal sentence part in African tone languages. Based on new empirical evidence from five Gur and Kwa languages, we claim that these focus expressions have to be analysed as biclausal constructions even though they do not represent clefts containing restrictive relative clauses. First, we relativize the partly overgeneralized assumptions about structural correspondences between the out-of-focus part and relative clauses, and second, we show that our data do in fact support the hypothesis of a clause coordinating pattern as present in clause sequences in narration. It is argued that we deal with a non-accidental, systematic feature and that grammaticalization may conceal such basic narrative structures.
Focus expressions in Foodo (2007)
Fiedler, Ines
This paper aims at presenting different ways of expressing focus in Foodo, a Guang language. We can differentiate between marked and unmarked focus strategies. The marked focus expressions are first syntactically characterized: the focused constituent is in sentence-initial position and is second always marked obligatorily by a focus marker, which is [...] for non-subjects and N for subjects. Complementary to these structures, Foodo knows an elliptic form consisting of the focused constituent and a predication marker [...]. It will be shown that the two focus markers can be analyzed as having developed out of the homophone conjunction n[...] and that the constraints on the use of the focus markers can be best explained by this fact.
  • 1 to 10

OPUS4 Logo

  • Contact
  • Imprint
  • Sitelinks