´ëÇѾð¾îÇÐȸThe Linguistic Association of Korea

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Á¦¸ñ Why is the Locative NP in Kiswahili not Syntactically Oblique?
ÀúÀÚ Assibi A. Amidu
±Ç/È£ Á¦25±Ç / 1È£
Ãâó 1-27
³í¹®°ÔÀçÀÏ 2017.3.31.
ÃÊ·Ï Amidu, Assibi A. (2017). Why is the locative NP in Kiswahili not Syntactically Oblique? The Linguistic Association of Korea Journal, 25(1), 1-27. Kiswahili, a Bantu language, distinguishes between PPs, e.g. kutoka soko-ni Cl. 0 COP-a from market-Cl. 17/26, i.e. from market, lit. from in market' and NPs, e.g. m-pishi w-a soko-ni Cl. 1-cook Cl. 1 SM-COP-n of market-Cl. 17/26, i.e. market cook, lit. cook of in marker.' According to one group of linguists, a syntactic oblique is an NP and/or argument introduced by a syntactic preposition (P). Thus sokoni market, in the market' above is oblique because it is introduced by a preposition (P): the adverbial P-a/COP-a or P kutoka from', or the nominal P-n/COP-n or P wa of', whose P-root is {a}. Another group of linguists states that every locative is a syntactic oblique in postverbal position, whether it is an NP or a PP. This study argues that the Kiswahili locative NP is not a syntactic oblique unless it is the complement in a PP. It is also shown that a syntactic oblique is not the same as a lexical or inflectional oblique case in linguistics. We conclude that the use of a colonial reductionist hypothesis' to determine obliqueness in the Bantu languages, in the name of universal grammar, undermines efforts at highlighting the diversity between the languages of the world.
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