Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
933610 Journal of Pragmatics 2008 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper is the first of two (see references) aiming to bring to the attention of pragmaticians an idiosyncratic classifier system that encodes speaker-roles along the lines of gender and age. Isolating (analytic) languages are known for their scarcity of word forms and for their under-specification of grammatical categories. Analytic languages in East and Southeast Asian involve classifiers – a word category without counterpart in most languages of the inflectional type – to attenuate some of the vagueness in the nominal realm. Similar to other parts of speech, the classifier generally constitutes a one-form word category with occasional sandhi-derivations. Weining Ahmao, a Miao language spoken in SW China, significantly deviates from this pattern with regard to classifiers. While it generally follows the pattern of one-word categories, it has developed a highly uncommon system of classifiers. Each of its ca. 50 classifiers can be inflected in a 12-form paradigm encoding three semantic features: number [singular, plural], definiteness [definite, indefinite] and size/importance [augmentative, medial, diminutive]. Furthermore, the Ahmao system exhibits a rare form of social deixis whereby each classifier form mirrors information on the gender and age of the speaker. The augmentative form of a classifier is pragmatically unmarked when employed by men; the medial form is unmarked when a woman is the speaker and the diminutive version of a classifier is typically associated with child speakers.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics