A Comparative Grammar Of The Modern Aryan Languages Of India To Wit Hindi Panjabi Sindhi Gujarati Marathi Oriya And Bangali


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Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India


Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India

Author: John Beames

language: en

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Release Date: 2012-06-07


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First published in the 1870s, this three-volume comparative grammar covers sounds, nominals and verbs in the Indo-Aryan languages.

Grammaticalization and the Rise of Configurationality in Indo-Aryan


Grammaticalization and the Rise of Configurationality in Indo-Aryan

Author: Uta Reinöhl

language: en

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Release Date: 2017-04-14


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This book examines historical changes in the grammar of the Indo-Aryan languages from the period of their earliest attestations in Vedic Sanskrit (around 1000 bc) to contemporary Hindi. Uta Reinöhl focuses specifically on the rise of configurational structure as a by-product of the grammaticalization of postpositions: while Vedic Sanskrit lacks function words that constrain nominal expressions into phrasal units - one of the characteristics of a non-configurational language - New Indo-Aryan languages have postpositions which organize nominal expressions into postpositional phrases. The grammaticalization of postpositions and the concomitant syntactic changes are traced through the three millennia of Indo-Aryan attested history with a focus on Vedic Sanskrit, Middle Indic Pali and Apabhramsha, Early New Indic Old Awadhi, and finally Hindi. Among the topics discussed are the constructions in which the postpositions grammaticalize, the origins of the postpositional template, and the paradigmatization of the various elements involved into a single functional class of postpositions. The book outlines how it is semantic and pragmatic changes that induce changes on the expression side, ultimately resulting in the establishment of phrasal, and thus low-level configurational, syntax.