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Applicative Constructions
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 307

Applicative Constructions

This book presents the first systematic typological analysis of applicatives across African, American Indian, and East Asian languages. It is also the first to address their functions in discourse, the derivation of their semantic and syntactic properties, and how and why they have changed over time. Applicative constructions are typically described as transitivizing because they allow an intransitive base verb to have a direct object. The term originates from the seventeenth-century missionary grammars of Uto-Aztecan languages. Constructions designated as prepositional, benefactive, and instrumental may refer to the same or similar phenomena. Applicative constructions have been deployed in ...

Language Typology and Historical Contingency
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 522

Language Typology and Historical Contingency

What is the range of diversity in linguistic types, what are the geographical distributions for the attested types, and what explanations, based on shared history or universals, can account for these distributions? This collection of articles by prominent scholars in typology seeks to address these issues from a wide range of theoretical perspectives, utilizing cutting-edge typological methodology. The phenomena considered range from the phonological to the morphosyntactic, the areal coverage ranges in scale from micro-areal to worldwide, and the types of historical contingency range from contact-based to genealogical in nature. Together, the papers argue strongly for a view in which, although they use distinct methodologies, linguistic typology and historical linguistics are one and the same enterprise directed at discovering how languages came to be the way they are and how linguistic types came to be distributed geographically as they are.

Applicative Constructions
  • Language: en

Applicative Constructions

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: Unknown
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

This book presents a typological analysis of applicatives across African, American Indian, and East Asian languages. It also addresses their functions in discourse, the derivation of their semantic and syntactic properties, and how and why they have changed over time.

The Politics of Genocide
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 179

The Politics of Genocide

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010-04-01
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  • Publisher: NYU Press

In this impressive book, Edward S. Herman and David Peterson examine the uses and abuses of the word “genocide.” They argue persuasively that the label is highly politicized and that in the United States it is used by the government, journalists, and academics to brand as evil those nations and political movements that in one way or another interfere with the imperial interests of U.S. capitalism. Thus the word “genocide” is seldom applied when the perpetrators are U.S. allies (or even the United States itself), while it is used almost indiscriminately when murders are committed or are alleged to have been committed by enemies of the United States and U.S. business interests. One set...

History of Black Hawk County, Iowa, and Its People
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 545

History of Black Hawk County, Iowa, and Its People

None

Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 2030

Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1974
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Where the Rules Fail: a Student's Guide: an Unauthorised Appendix to M.K. Burt's From Deep to Surface Structure
  • Language: en
Dicourse-functional, and Typological Aspects of Applicative Constructions
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 648

Dicourse-functional, and Typological Aspects of Applicative Constructions

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1999
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Border People
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 380

Border People

Looks at life on the Mexican border, including the ethnicity, attitudes, and place of residence of those who live there, and how they interact with other residents

George I. Sánchez
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 400

George I. Sánchez

George I. Sánchez was a reformer, activist, and intellectual, and one of the most influential members of the "Mexican American Generation" (1930–1960). A professor of education at the University of Texas from the beginning of World War II until the early 1970s, Sánchez was an outspoken proponent of integration and assimilation. He spent his life combating racial prejudice while working with such organizations as the ACLU and LULAC in the fight to improve educational and political opportunities for Mexican Americans. Yet his fervor was not always appreciated by those for whom he advocated, and some of his more unpopular stands made him a polarizing figure within the Latino community. Carlos Blanton has published the first biography of this complex man of notable contradictions. The author honors Sánchez’s efforts, hitherto mostly unrecognized, in the struggle for equal opportunity, while not shying away from his subject’s personal faults and foibles. The result is a long-overdue portrait of a towering figure in mid-twentieth-century America and the all-important cause to which he dedicated his life: Mexican American integration.