Affiliation:
1. Radboud University Nijmegen
Abstract
Abstract
In this article, we focus on the origin of the Wolof subject-focus construction (SFC) from a dynamic perspective.
In Wolof, argument focus is expressed morpho-syntactically by means of copulaless cleft constructions consisting of the
juxtaposition of the focus and a free relative clause. The free relative clause is headed by a determiner, which takes the form
a in the case of the SFC. The determiner a is not found anywhere else in the language
outside of SFC. We hypothesise that Wolof borrowed its SFC from Berber languages. The sociohistorical scenario, based on oral
tradition, could have been the emergence of Wolof, as a crucible of contact between peoples of diverse origin including Berber
groups. This finding is strengthened by the occurrence of other elements common to Wolof and Berber languages, such as clitic
attraction, negation, copula insertion, as well as a number of lexical parallelisms.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference46 articles.
1. The Wolof argument-focus constructions as copulaless clefts;Bourdeau;Journal of African Languages and Linguistics