Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Nicht aus der Schweiz? Besuchen Sie lehmanns.de
A Grammar of Piedmontese - Mauro Tosco, Emanuele Miola, Nicola Duberti

A Grammar of Piedmontese

A Minority Language of Northwest Italy
Buch | Hardcover
600 Seiten
2023
Brill (Verlag)
978-90-04-54405-5 (ISBN)
CHF 203,00 inkl. MwSt
  • Versand in 15-20 Tagen
  • Versandkostenfrei
  • Auch auf Rechnung
  • Artikel merken
The first comprehensive and linguistically updated grammar of Piedmontese, a threatened language of northwest Italy. This thorough description covers the phonology, morphology, syntax, pragmatics and typology of koine Piedmontese.
Cerea, madamin, andoma bin? Less than a century ago, this was one of the most frequent greetings heard in Piedmont, a region in northwest Italy. Today, however, Piedmontese is severely endangered.

This volume presents the first widely accessible and comprehensive grammatical description of the contemporary koine, covering its phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, pragmatics and typology, and drawing examples from both oral and written sources. Data on the history of the language and the local dialects and notes on revitalization efforts are also included.

Mauro Tosco is professor of African Linguistics at the University of Turin. His main area of research is the Horn of Africa. He also works on the revitalization of minority languages and language policy and ideology. Emanuele Miola is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Bologna. His research interests include sociolinguistics, Italo-Romance and Piedmontese dialectology, and typology. Nicola Duberti is Adjunct Professor of Piedmontese at the University of Turin. His main areas of research are the dialectology of Piedmontese varieties and the history of Piedmontese literature. He also works on the revitalization of minority languages in schools.

Conventions, Glosses and Symbols

Maps of Place Names in Piedmont Mentioned in the Grammar

List of Maps, Tables and Figures



1 The Language and Its History, Classification and Variation

 1.1 Overview: Language and Speakers

 1.2 Disentangling Classification and Ideology

 1.3 The Dialects of Piedmontese: Features and Classification

 1.4 The Internal Classification of the Piedmontese Varieties

 1.5 Social Varieties in Old Piedmontese

 1.6 The Speech of the Piedmontese Jews, Sinti and Waldensians

 1.7 A Short Linguistic History of Piedmont

 1.8 An Outline of the Piedmontese Literature



2 Phonetics and Phonology

 2.1 Default Articulation of Phonemes

 2.2 Loan Phonemes, Borrowing and Adaptation

 2.3 Previous Accounts of the Phonology of Piedmontese

 2.4 Phonetic Processes

 2.5 Positional Restrictions on the Occurrence of Phonemes

 2.6 Syllables

 2.7 Clusters

 2.8 Length

 2.9 Stress

 2.10 Pitch and Intonation



3 Writing System and Orthography

 3.1 Overview

 3.2 History

 3.3 Evaluation



4 Words, Word Constituents and Word Classes

 4.1 Roots, Stems, Words, Affixes and Clitics

 4.2 Morphological Mechanisms

 4.3 Suppletion

 4.4 Syncretism

 4.5 Word Classes



5 Nouns

 5.1 Overview

 5.2 Gender

 5.3 Number

 5.4 Derivational Morphology of Nouns



6 Adjectives

 6.1 Overview

 6.2 Semantics of Adjectives

 6.3 Morphology of Adjectives

 6.4 Comparative Constructions

 6.5 Adjectives as Nouns

 6.6 Derivational Morphology of Adjectives



7 Personal Pronouns

 7.1 Overview

 7.2 Independent Personal Pronouns

 7.3 Subject Personal Pronouns

 7.4 Non-subject Personal Pronouns: Object and Indirect Object

 7.5 Interrogative Subject Clitics

 7.6 Reflexive, Reciprocal and Impersonal Personal Pronouns

 7.7 Attributive Pronoun

 7.8 Lexicalized Verb-Clitic Constructions

 7.9 Post-Tonic Vowel Dropping

 7.10 Sequences of Clitics



8 Grounding and Deixis

 8.1 Overview

 8.2 Determiners and Classifiers

 8.3 Deixis

 8.4 Possessives



9 Quantifiers

 9.1 Numerals

 9.2 Generic Quantifiers

 9.3 Negative Quantifiers

 9.4 Interrogative Quantifiers

 9.5 Quantificational Quantifiers



10 Verbs

 10.1 Semantic Overview

 10.2 Morphological Overview

 10.3 Affixes, Allomorphy and Syncretism

 10.4 Historical and Comparative Notes

 10.5 Moods and Tenses

 10.6 Use of the Auxiliaries

 10.7 Verbal Derivation



11 Verbal Periphrases and Modalities

 11.1 Valency-Increasing Operation, 1: Causative

 11.2 Valency-Increasing Operation, 2: Permissive

 11.3 Valency-Increasing Operation, 3: Middle

 11.4 Modal Verbs

 11.5 Progressive and Continuous

 11.6 Imminential

 11.7 Inchoative

 11.8 Durative

 11.9 Terminative

 11.10 Immediative

 11.11 Iterative



12 Adverbs

 12.1 Overview

 12.2 Predicate Adverbs

 12.3 Degree Adverbs and Focalizers

 12.4 Sentence Adverbs

 12.5 Linking Adverbs

 12.6 Adverb Formation Rules and Productivity



13 Prepositions and Prepositional Phrases

 13.1 The Expression of Location and Movement

 13.2 Basic Prepositions

 13.3 Non-basic Prepositions

 13.4 Prepositional Use of Adverbs

 13.5 Attributive Phrases and Binominal Constructions



14 Phrases

 14.1 The Structure of the Noun Phrase

 14.2 Grounding and Ordering of Phrases

 14.3 Adjectival Phrases

 14.4 Temporal Phrases and Telling the Time



15 Clauses

 15.1 Non-verbal Predication

 15.2 Declarative Clauses

 15.3 Introducing the Ubiquitous che

 15.4 “Bare” che in Non-verbal Predication

 15.5 Relative Clauses

 15.6 Imperative Clauses

 15.7 Exhortative Clauses

 15.8 Mirative and Exclamative Clauses

 15.9 Questions

 15.10 The Expression of Atmospheric Events



16 Linkage

 16.1 Coordination

 16.2 Subordination



17 Negation

 17.1 Overview

 17.2 Sentence Negators

 17.3 Negation with Scope over Smaller Units

 17.4 Other Negative Items

 17.5 Negative Concord

 17.6 Holophrastic Negation



18 Pragmatics and Discourse

 18.1 Information Structure and Sentence Word Order

 18.2 Hanging Topics and Clefts

 18.3 Discourse Markers



19 Piedmontese in a Typological Perspective

 19.1 Genealogy and Overview

 19.2 Phonology

 19.3 Morphosyntax

 19.4 Lexical Typology

 19.5 Piedmontese, Standard Average European, and Other Romance Languages



20 Use, Contact and Care: Codeswitching, Endangerment, Enrichment and Standardization

 20.1 Language Ideology through Language Use

 20.2 The Long Road toward Resurgence

 20.3 Envoi



Appendix: Text

References

Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Romance Languages ; 19
Verlagsort Leiden
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Gewicht 1118 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Sprachwissenschaft
ISBN-10 90-04-54405-4 / 9004544054
ISBN-13 978-90-04-54405-5 / 9789004544055
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich

von Ritchie Robertson

Buch | Softcover (2025)
Reaktion Books (Verlag)
CHF 25,90
A Norton Critical Edition

von Daniel Defoe; Albert J. Rivero

Buch | Softcover (2024)
WW Norton & Co (Verlag)
CHF 21,95
Affektordnungen des Sozialen in der Gegenwartsliteratur

von Sophie König; Lara Tarbuk; Robert Walter-Jochum …

Buch | Softcover (2025)
De Gruyter (Verlag)
CHF 62,90