Affiliation:
1. University of Leuven
2. Australian National University
Abstract
Abstract
This study analyses the role of conjunctions in clause linkage in Australian languages. Conjunctions are seemingly
straightforward clause-linking devices, but they remain under-studied, both for Australian languages and from a broader
typological perspective. In this study, we propose a functional definition of conjunctions, as set against other resources for
clause linkage. We show that this captures not just the prototypical free-standing elements (the equivalents of if, because, but
etc.), but also various types of bound markers with a similar function (bound to clause-scoping positions or predicates). We
survey the role of conjunctions in a representative sample of 53 Australian languages, showing that they are not a marginal clause
linkage resource in Australia, as seems to be assumed in the relevant literature, but often form a major category within clause
linkage systems. We also identify a number of areal patterns, based on the size of conjunction inventories and their
morphosyntactic features.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics