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Dimmendaal GJ (2009). Datives in Nilotic in a typological perspective. Afrikanistik online, Vol. 2009. (urn:nbn:de:0009-10-23558)

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%0 Journal Article
%T Datives in Nilotic in a typological perspective
%A Dimmendaal, Gerrit J.
%J Afrikanistik online
%D 2009
%V 2009
%N 6
%@ 1860-7462
%F dimmendaal2009
%X Amongst the set of widespread derivational extensions on verbs in Nilotic, there is one prototypically marking an event directed towards some individual or a location, usually referred to as the Dative marker in the study of this language family. The Nilotic family is commonly divided into three branches (following Köhler 1955): Western, Eastern, and Southern Nilotic, and the Dative suffix is attested in all three primary branches of this Nilo-Saharan subgroup. Since Dative marking in Nilotic languages involves the use of cognate morphemes, these distributional facts allow us – in principle – to trace down not only the formal but also the syntactic and semantic history of this verbal marker.
%L 490
%K Datives
%K Nilotic
%K Turkana
%U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-23558

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Bibtex

@Article{dimmendaal2009,
  author = 	"Dimmendaal, Gerrit J.",
  title = 	"Datives in Nilotic in a typological perspective",
  journal = 	"Afrikanistik online",
  year = 	"2009",
  volume = 	"2009",
  number = 	"6",
  keywords = 	"Datives; Nilotic; Turkana",
  abstract = 	"Amongst the set of widespread derivational extensions on verbs in Nilotic, there is one prototypically marking an event directed towards some individual or a location, usually referred to as the Dative marker in the study of this language family. The Nilotic family is commonly divided into three branches (following K{\"o}hler 1955): Western, Eastern, and Southern Nilotic, and the Dative suffix is attested in all three primary branches of this Nilo-Saharan subgroup. Since Dative marking in Nilotic languages involves the use of cognate morphemes, these distributional facts allow us -- in principle -- to trace down not only the formal but also the syntactic and semantic history of this verbal marker.",
  issn = 	"1860-7462",
  url = 	"http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-23558"
}

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RIS

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Dimmendaal, Gerrit J.
PY  - 2009
DA  - 2009//
TI  - Datives in Nilotic in a typological perspective
JO  - Afrikanistik online
VL  - 2009
IS  - 6
KW  - Datives
KW  - Nilotic
KW  - Turkana
AB  - Amongst the set of widespread derivational extensions on verbs in Nilotic, there is one prototypically marking an event directed towards some individual or a location, usually referred to as the Dative marker in the study of this language family. The Nilotic family is commonly divided into three branches (following Köhler 1955): Western, Eastern, and Southern Nilotic, and the Dative suffix is attested in all three primary branches of this Nilo-Saharan subgroup. Since Dative marking in Nilotic languages involves the use of cognate morphemes, these distributional facts allow us – in principle – to trace down not only the formal but also the syntactic and semantic history of this verbal marker.
SN  - 1860-7462
UR  - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-23558
ID  - dimmendaal2009
ER  - 
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Wordbib

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<b:Comments>Amongst the set of widespread derivational extensions on verbs in Nilotic, there is one prototypically marking an event directed towards some individual or a location, usually referred to as the Dative marker in the study of this language family. The Nilotic family is commonly divided into three branches (following Köhler 1955): Western, Eastern, and Southern Nilotic, and the Dative suffix is attested in all three primary branches of this Nilo-Saharan subgroup. Since Dative marking in Nilotic languages involves the use of cognate morphemes, these distributional facts allow us – in principle – to trace down not only the formal but also the syntactic and semantic history of this verbal marker.</b:Comments>
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ISI

PT Journal
AU Dimmendaal, G
TI Datives in Nilotic in a typological perspective
SO Afrikanistik online
PY 2009
VL 2009
IS 6
DE Datives; Nilotic; Turkana
AB Amongst the set of widespread derivational extensions on verbs in Nilotic, there is one prototypically marking an event directed towards some individual or a location, usually referred to as the Dative marker in the study of this language family. The Nilotic family is commonly divided into three branches (following Köhler 1955): Western, Eastern, and Southern Nilotic, and the Dative suffix is attested in all three primary branches of this Nilo-Saharan subgroup. Since Dative marking in Nilotic languages involves the use of cognate morphemes, these distributional facts allow us – in principle – to trace down not only the formal but also the syntactic and semantic history of this verbal marker.
ER

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Mods

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  <titleInfo>
    <title>Datives in Nilotic in a typological perspective</title>
  </titleInfo>
  <name type="personal">
    <namePart type="family">Dimmendaal</namePart>
    <namePart type="given">Gerrit J.</namePart>
  </name>
  <abstract>Amongst the set of widespread derivational extensions on verbs in Nilotic, there is one prototypically marking an event directed towards some individual or a location, usually referred to as the Dative marker in the study of this language family. The Nilotic family is commonly divided into three branches (following Köhler 1955): Western, Eastern, and Southern Nilotic, and the Dative suffix is attested in all three primary branches of this Nilo-Saharan subgroup. Since Dative marking in Nilotic languages involves the use of cognate morphemes, these distributional facts allow us – in principle – to trace down not only the formal but also the syntactic and semantic history of this verbal marker.</abstract>
  <subject>
    <topic>Datives</topic>
    <topic>Nilotic</topic>
    <topic>Turkana</topic>
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