[sys-func] Re: Word: Special issues on the nominal group

  • From: Alison Moore <amoore@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: sys-func@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 21:33:18 +1000

Congrats Yaegan, Jim, Mus and all involved on the special issue and the whole project.

And, I always love seeing your work on Australian languages David.

Alison
On 17/06/22 08.39 PM, David Rose (david.rose) wrote:


In many Australian languages, the nominal group inflection may be repeated on each element in the group... makes it clear what’s in the group. Like this verbless attributive clause in Kayardid (Gulf of Carpentaria), so we can tell what’s Carrier and what’s Attribute.

/wamgiid///

        

/-a /

        

/barrngka/

        

/-a /

        

/niwan/

        

/-ji/

        

/nal/

        

/-i/

one

        

abs

        

waterlily

        

abs

        

3s.poss

        

loc

        

head

        

loc

Carrier

        

        

        

Attribute

        

        

        

Deictic

        

        

Thing

        

        

Deictic

        

        

Thing

        

A waterlily was on his head

David

*From: *sys-func-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <sys-func-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of Shoshana Dreyfus <shooshi@xxxxxxxxxx>
*Date: *Friday, 17 June 2022 at 5:44 pm
*To: *sys-func@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <sys-func@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
*Subject: *[sys-func] Re: Word: Special issues on the nominal group

I'd love to do it on Hebrew – in another life perhaps….but just out of interest:

The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog translates as (reading from left to right):

השיעל החום המהר קפץ מעל הכלב העצלן

And translated exactly as:

The fox the brown the quick jumped from on the dog the lazy

So all premodification is listed after the Thing with “the” in front of it!

*From: *<sys-func-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of Yaegan Doran <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
*Reply to: *"sys-func@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <sys-func@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
*Date: *Friday, 17 June 2022 at 1:34 pm
*To: *SYSFLING <SYSFLING@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "asflanet@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <asflanet@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, sys-func <sys-func@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
*Subject: *[sys-func] Word: Special issues on the nominal group

Hi all,

Just an announcement that the fourth and final issue in a series published by /Word/ on: /The Grammar of Nominal Groups: Systemic Functional Linguistics Perspectives/ has just been published:

https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwrd20/68/2?nav=tocList <https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwrd20/68/2?nav=tocList>

This series, edited by J.R. Martin, Dongbing Zhang and myself, has brought together scholar from across the world to describe nominal groups using SFL in 13 languages. In doing so, a number of descriptive and theoretical issues have been pushed by the various authors, and the breadth of SFL language description has been significantly increased. The papers are consistently fantastic, in my opinion! Thanks to the authors for all their excellent work. And big thanks as well to Jonathan Webster and Peggy Tse for giving us the opportunity and supporting us along the way.

If you are interested in language description or applications of SFL in languages other than English, I thoroughly encourage you to have a read – and to think about doing some work on a language of your own! If you don’t have access, you can contact the authors who I’m sure will be happy to pass on a copy.

The full list of papers are:

*Special issue 1 – Word 67.3 2021*

**

[1] Martin, Doran and Zhang – Nominal group grammar: System and structure.

[2] Mwinlaaru – deixis in the Dagaare nominal group: Syntagmatic and paradigmatic perspectives

[3] Wang – Nominal group system and structure in Lhasa Tibetan

[4] Zhang – The nominal group in Khorchin Mongolian: A Systemic Functional perspective

[5] Matin and Shin – Korean nominal groups: System and structure.

*Special issue 2a*: *Word 67.4 2021*

[6] Stosic – Serbian nominal groups: System and structure

[7] Figueredo – The nominal group in Brazilian Portuguese

[8] Cummings – Interpreting the Old English nominal group from a parsed corpus

*Special issue 2b*: *Word 68.1 2022*

[9] Porter and Land – The Ancient Greek nominal group, with attention to the Greek New Testament

[10] Rose – Nominal groups in Pitjantjatjara

*Special issue 3: Word 68.2 2022*

**

[11] Rudge – The nominal group in British Sign Language: A preliminary description.

[12] Hao and Wang – Chinese nominal groups: The metaphorical realisation of figures.

[13] Doran and Bangga – Sundanese nominal groups: Meaning in text

[14] Martin and Cruz – Re/construing our world: An ecolinguistic perspective on Tagalog nominal group resources

Yaegan

*Y. J. DORAN*
*AUSTRALIAN CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY*

--
*Alison Moore, PhD MPH*
Associate Professor in English Language & Linguistics
Head of Postgraduate Studies
School of Humanities & Social Inquiry
Faculty of Arts, Social Sciences & Humanities
University of Wollongong 2522 NSW Australia
email: amoore@xxxxxxxxxx

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