Singerman (2018) – The morphosyntax of Tuparí, a Tupían language of the Brazilian Amazon

The morphosyntax of Tuparí, a Tupían language of the Brazilian Amazon
Adam Singerman
direct link: http://ling.auf.net/lingbuzz/004253
July 2018
This dissertation provides the most extensive description and analysis yet available for Tuparí, an endangered Tupían language spoken by approximately 350 people in the Brazilian state of Rondônia. Previous work on Tuparí discussed basic phonology and morphology only (Caspar and Rodrigues 1957, Seki 2001, Alves 2004); this dissertation, in contrast, addresses a wide range of grammatical questions with a special focus on the syntactic organization of the Tuparí clause. All the data presented and analyzed here were collected by the author over the course of over eight months of on-site field research in Rondônia. Following the best practices of documentary linguistics, I prioritize naturally-occurring data over elicited examples throughout the dissertation. Much use is made of the texts included in a 2016 literacy workbook edited by myself in collaboration with several indigenous schoolteachers, as well as from a separate text collection now in progress.

Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/004253
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in: Doctoral dissertation, University of Chicago
keywords: documentation, amazonian languages, tupían, tuparí, evidentiality, morphology, syntax, phonology