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Mahamane LA (2008). Perfect and Perfective in Hausa. Afrikanistik online, Vol. 2008. (urn:nbn:de:0009-10-13825)

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%0 Journal Article
%T Perfect and Perfective in Hausa
%A Mahamane, L. Abdoulaye
%J Afrikanistik online
%D 2008
%V 2008
%N 5
%@ 1860-7462
%F mahamane2008
%X In West African languages that have the relative TAM marking, i.e., a system of syntactically conditioned alternating TAM paradigms, it is generally considered that the paradigms in each alternating pair have necessarily the same meaning. This paper shows that in Hausa, the Completive, which appears in pragmatically neutral clauses, and the Relative Perfective, which appears in pragmatically marked clauses (such as relative clauses), have, respectively, a basic perfect and perfective semantics, and that in some marked cases the alternation is not possible. The paper also shows that the two paradigms have acquired derived uses in a way consistent with the results of typological studies in the domain of tense/aspect.
%L 490
%K Aspekt
%K Hausa
%K TAM
%K Tempus
%K aspect
%K tense
%U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-13825

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Bibtex

@Article{mahamane2008,
  author = 	"Mahamane, L. Abdoulaye",
  title = 	"Perfect and Perfective in Hausa",
  journal = 	"Afrikanistik online",
  year = 	"2008",
  volume = 	"2008",
  number = 	"5",
  keywords = 	"Aspekt; Hausa; TAM; Tempus; aspect; tense",
  abstract = 	"In West African languages that have the relative TAM marking, i.e., a system of syntactically conditioned alternating TAM paradigms, it is generally considered that the paradigms in each alternating pair have necessarily the same meaning. This paper shows that in Hausa, the Completive, which appears in pragmatically neutral clauses, and the Relative Perfective, which appears in pragmatically marked clauses (such as relative clauses), have, respectively, a basic perfect and perfective semantics, and that in some marked cases the alternation is not possible. The paper also shows that the two paradigms have acquired derived uses in a way consistent with the results of typological studies in the domain of tense/aspect.",
  issn = 	"1860-7462",
  url = 	"http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-13825"
}

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RIS

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Mahamane, L. Abdoulaye
PY  - 2008
DA  - 2008//
TI  - Perfect and Perfective in Hausa
JO  - Afrikanistik online
VL  - 2008
IS  - 5
KW  - Aspekt
KW  - Hausa
KW  - TAM
KW  - Tempus
KW  - aspect
KW  - tense
AB  - In West African languages that have the relative TAM marking, i.e., a system of syntactically conditioned alternating TAM paradigms, it is generally considered that the paradigms in each alternating pair have necessarily the same meaning. This paper shows that in Hausa, the Completive, which appears in pragmatically neutral clauses, and the Relative Perfective, which appears in pragmatically marked clauses (such as relative clauses), have, respectively, a basic perfect and perfective semantics, and that in some marked cases the alternation is not possible. The paper also shows that the two paradigms have acquired derived uses in a way consistent with the results of typological studies in the domain of tense/aspect.
SN  - 1860-7462
UR  - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-13825
ID  - mahamane2008
ER  - 
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Wordbib

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<b:Comments>In West African languages that have the relative TAM marking, i.e., a system of syntactically conditioned alternating TAM paradigms, it is generally considered that the paradigms in each alternating pair have necessarily the same meaning. This paper shows that in Hausa, the Completive, which appears in pragmatically neutral clauses, and the Relative Perfective, which appears in pragmatically marked clauses (such as relative clauses), have, respectively, a basic perfect and perfective semantics, and that in some marked cases the alternation is not possible. The paper also shows that the two paradigms have acquired derived uses in a way consistent with the results of typological studies in the domain of tense/aspect.</b:Comments>
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ISI

PT Journal
AU Mahamane, L
TI Perfect and Perfective in Hausa
SO Afrikanistik online
PY 2008
VL 2008
IS 5
DE Aspekt; Hausa; TAM; Tempus; aspect; tense
AB In West African languages that have the relative TAM marking, i.e., a system of syntactically conditioned alternating TAM paradigms, it is generally considered that the paradigms in each alternating pair have necessarily the same meaning. This paper shows that in Hausa, the Completive, which appears in pragmatically neutral clauses, and the Relative Perfective, which appears in pragmatically marked clauses (such as relative clauses), have, respectively, a basic perfect and perfective semantics, and that in some marked cases the alternation is not possible. The paper also shows that the two paradigms have acquired derived uses in a way consistent with the results of typological studies in the domain of tense/aspect.
ER

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Mods

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  <titleInfo>
    <title>Perfect and Perfective in Hausa</title>
  </titleInfo>
  <name type="personal">
    <namePart type="family">Mahamane</namePart>
    <namePart type="given">L. Abdoulaye</namePart>
  </name>
  <abstract>In West African languages that have the relative TAM marking, i.e., a system of syntactically conditioned alternating TAM paradigms, it is generally considered that the paradigms in each alternating pair have necessarily the same meaning. This paper shows that in Hausa, the Completive, which appears in pragmatically neutral clauses, and the Relative Perfective, which appears in pragmatically marked clauses (such as relative clauses), have, respectively, a basic perfect and perfective semantics, and that in some marked cases the alternation is not possible. The paper also shows that the two paradigms have acquired derived uses in a way consistent with the results of typological studies in the domain of tense/aspect.</abstract>
  <subject>
    <topic>Aspekt</topic>
    <topic>Hausa</topic>
    <topic>TAM</topic>
    <topic>Tempus</topic>
    <topic>aspect</topic>
    <topic>tense</topic>
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