A Descriptive Grammar of Eastern Minyag: An Undescribed Tibeto- Burman Language
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Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Doctor of PhilosophyAuthor/s
Conrad, AgnesAbstract
This dissertation is a descriptive grammar of the Mujuka dialect of Eastern Minyag (ISO 639-3:emq), an
endangered Tibeto-Burman language spoken in Shímián County (CH: 石棉县) and Jiǔlóng County (CH:
九龙县), Sìchuān Province (CH: 四川省), People’s Republic of China. It is primarily focused ...
See moreThis dissertation is a descriptive grammar of the Mujuka dialect of Eastern Minyag (ISO 639-3:emq), an endangered Tibeto-Burman language spoken in Shímián County (CH: 石棉县) and Jiǔlóng County (CH: 九龙县), Sìchuān Province (CH: 四川省), People’s Republic of China. It is primarily focused on morphological and intra-clausal description, with Chapters §3-§6 representing the most contentful portions of the grammar. Chapter §1: Introduction gives background information on the project, language, and speaker community. Chapter §2: Phonology presents Eastern Minyag phonology, covering the language’s inventory of consonants and vowels, syllable structure, prosodic features, and phonological processes. The chapter includes spectrograms and waveforms extracted from high-quality recordings. Chapter §3: Word Classes introduces major and minor word classes in Eastern Minyag with a special focus on morphology unique to each class. Chapter §4: The Noun Phrase considers noun phrase structure, modification, and coordination. Its primary focus is the semantic and syntactic features of two types of noun phrase modifiers: determiners and genitive phrases. Chapter §5: Verbs introduces verbal morphology, monoclausal multi-verb constructions, and post-verbal TAME particles. Chapter §6: Clause Structure describes basic types of simple clauses, grammatical relations, information structure marking, and clause final particles. Chapter §7: Interclausal Continuity is a brief presentation of complex constructions and strategies for joining simple clauses in discourse. There are four appendices. Appendices A and B are annotated texts. Appendix C is a translated bibliography of Chinese sources on the Eastern Minyag language and people. Appendix D details the contents of this study’s archived corpus of language data.
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See moreThis dissertation is a descriptive grammar of the Mujuka dialect of Eastern Minyag (ISO 639-3:emq), an endangered Tibeto-Burman language spoken in Shímián County (CH: 石棉县) and Jiǔlóng County (CH: 九龙县), Sìchuān Province (CH: 四川省), People’s Republic of China. It is primarily focused on morphological and intra-clausal description, with Chapters §3-§6 representing the most contentful portions of the grammar. Chapter §1: Introduction gives background information on the project, language, and speaker community. Chapter §2: Phonology presents Eastern Minyag phonology, covering the language’s inventory of consonants and vowels, syllable structure, prosodic features, and phonological processes. The chapter includes spectrograms and waveforms extracted from high-quality recordings. Chapter §3: Word Classes introduces major and minor word classes in Eastern Minyag with a special focus on morphology unique to each class. Chapter §4: The Noun Phrase considers noun phrase structure, modification, and coordination. Its primary focus is the semantic and syntactic features of two types of noun phrase modifiers: determiners and genitive phrases. Chapter §5: Verbs introduces verbal morphology, monoclausal multi-verb constructions, and post-verbal TAME particles. Chapter §6: Clause Structure describes basic types of simple clauses, grammatical relations, information structure marking, and clause final particles. Chapter §7: Interclausal Continuity is a brief presentation of complex constructions and strategies for joining simple clauses in discourse. There are four appendices. Appendices A and B are annotated texts. Appendix C is a translated bibliography of Chinese sources on the Eastern Minyag language and people. Appendix D details the contents of this study’s archived corpus of language data.
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Date
2025Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School of HumanitiesDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Discipline of LinguisticsAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare