Lingue salish

Famiglia di lingue del nord-America

{{Lingua |colore=#FF0000 |nome=Lingue Salish |nomenativo= |stati=Canada, USA |regione= Columbia Britannica, Washington, Oregon, Idaho,Montana |persone=circa 520[1] |classifstati compiuti progressi nella ricostruzione.[2]

Sintassi

Le lingue Salish sono note per la loro natura polisintetica. Una radice verbale può avere almeno un affisso, tipicamente un suffisso. Questi suffissi servono ad indicare una serie di funzioni, transitiva, causale, reciproca, riflessiva e applicativa.

Note

Bibliografia

  • Beck, David. (2000). Grammatical Convergence and the Genesis of Diversity in the Northwest Coast Sprachbund. Anthropological Linguistics 42, 147–213.
  • Boas, Franz, et al. (1917). Folk-Tales of Salishan and Sahaptin Tribes. Memoirs of the American Folk-Lore Society, 11. Lancaster, Pa: American Folk-Lore Society.
  • Czaykowska-Higgins, Ewa; & Dale Kinkade (Eds.). (1997). Salish Languages and Linguistics: Theoretical and Descriptive Perspectives. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-015492-7.
  • Davis, Henry. (2005). On the Syntax and Semantics of Negation in Salish. International Journal of American Linguistics 71.1, January 2005.
  • Davis, H. and Matthewson, L. (2009). Issues in Salish Syntax and Semantics. Language and Linguistics Compass, 3: 1097–1166. Online.
  • Flathead Culture Committee. (1981). Common Names of the Flathead Language. St. Ignatius, Mont: The Committee.
  • Jorgensen, Joseph G. (1969). Salish Language and Culture. 3. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Publications.
  • Kiyosawa, Kaoru; Donna B. Gerdts. (2010). Salish Applicatives. Leiden, Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV.
  • Kroeber, Paul D. (1999). The Salish Language Family: Reconstructing Syntax. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press in cooperation with the American Indian Studies Research Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington.
  • Kuipers, Aert H. (2002). Salish Etymological Dictionary. Missoula, MT: Linguistics Laboratory, University of Montana. ISBN 1-879763-16-8
  • Liedtke, Stefan. (1995). Wakashan, Salishan and Penutian and Wider Connections Cognate Sets. Linguistic Data on Diskette Series, no. 09. Munchen: Lincom Europa.
  • Pilling, James Constantine. (1893). Bibliography of the Salishan Languages. Washington: G.P.O.
  • Pilling, James Constantine (2007). Bibliography of the Salishan Languages. Reprint by Gardners Books. ISBN 978-1-4304-6927-8
  • Silver, Shirley; Wick R. Miller. (1997). American Indian languages: Cultural and Social Contexts. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Chad Hamill, Songs of power and prayer in the Columbia Plateau: the Jesuit, the medicine man, and the Indian hymn singer, Corvallis, Oregon State University Press, 2012, ISBN 978-0-87071-675-1. Salishan language hymns.
  • Thompson, Laurence C. (1973). The Northwest. In T. A. Sebeok (Ed.), Linguistics in North America (pp. 979–1045). Current Trends in Linguistics (Vol. 10). The Hague: Mouton.
  • Thompson, Laurence C. (1979). Salishan and the Northwest. In L. Campbell & M. Mithun (Eds.), The Languages of Native America: Historical and Comparative Assessment (pp. 692–765). Austin: University of Texas Press.

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Controllo di autoritàJ9U (ENHE987007553425305171

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