Maori as a phrase-based language. Yamada, F. ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2014. abstract bibtex Maori is an indigenous language spoken by the Maori people in New Zealand. It is an Austronesian language, belonging to the Polynesian subgroup, and sharing similar linguistic phenomena with other Polynesian languages. Category overlapping is one such phenomenon. Maori is known to have fluid word categories: A single lexical item can be used for multiple parts of speech without changing the word form. While previous studies on Maori grammar acknowledge the difficulty and inadequacy of applying the conventional part-of-speech system, they nonetheless resort to using that system, with its noun/verb distinction. This dissertation questions the validity of assuming the lexical categories in Maori and explores alternative approaches. Inspired by Broschart's (1997) study on Tongan, another Polynesian language, this dissertation shows that Maori word classification does not require a noun/verb distinction on the lexical or syntactic level. Maori has two types of syntactic categories, a TAM-phrase and a DETphrase. The category belongs to the entire phrase, which is a string of a particle and a lexical base. The lexical bases themselves are not specified for the categories of noun or verb, and they have the potential to form either a DET-phrase or a TAM-phrase. This finding supports Biggs's (1961) insight, which has been embraced by Maori linguists: The basic grammatical unit in Maori is a phrase, not a word. The two syntactic categories, DET-phrase and TAM-phrase, along with the general rules of a predicate-initial constituent order and left-headedness, suffice to account for the basic sentence structures of Maori.
@book{yamada_maori_2014,
title = {Maori as a phrase-based language},
abstract = {Maori is an indigenous language spoken by the Maori people in New Zealand. It is an Austronesian language, belonging to the Polynesian subgroup, and sharing similar linguistic phenomena with other Polynesian languages. Category overlapping is one such phenomenon. Maori is known to have fluid word categories: A single lexical item can be used for multiple parts of speech without changing the word form. While previous studies on Maori grammar acknowledge the difficulty and inadequacy of applying the conventional part-of-speech system, they nonetheless resort to using that system, with its noun/verb distinction. This dissertation questions the validity of assuming the lexical categories in Maori and explores alternative approaches. Inspired by Broschart's (1997) study on Tongan, another Polynesian language, this dissertation shows that Maori word classification does not require a noun/verb distinction on the lexical or syntactic level. Maori has two types of syntactic categories, a TAM-phrase and a DETphrase. The category belongs to the entire phrase, which is a string of a particle and a lexical base. The lexical bases themselves are not specified for the categories of noun or verb, and they have the potential to form either a DET-phrase or a TAM-phrase. This finding supports Biggs's (1961) insight, which has been embraced by Maori linguists: The basic grammatical unit in Maori is a phrase, not a word. The two syntactic categories, DET-phrase and TAM-phrase, along with the general rules of a predicate-initial constituent order and left-headedness, suffice to account for the basic sentence structures of Maori.},
language = {eng},
publisher = {ProQuest Dissertations Publishing},
author = {Yamada, Fumiko},
year = {2014},
keywords = {0290, Austronesian Languages, Language, Linguistics, Literature and Linguistics, Maori language, New Zealand, Parts of Speech, Polynesian Languages},
}
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This dissertation questions the validity of assuming the lexical categories in Maori and explores alternative approaches. Inspired by Broschart's (1997) study on Tongan, another Polynesian language, this dissertation shows that Maori word classification does not require a noun/verb distinction on the lexical or syntactic level. Maori has two types of syntactic categories, a TAM-phrase and a DETphrase. The category belongs to the entire phrase, which is a string of a particle and a lexical base. The lexical bases themselves are not specified for the categories of noun or verb, and they have the potential to form either a DET-phrase or a TAM-phrase. This finding supports Biggs's (1961) insight, which has been embraced by Maori linguists: The basic grammatical unit in Maori is a phrase, not a word. 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