A grammar of Pite Saami
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Joshua Wilbur
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ISBN 13: 9783944675473
Publisher: Language Science Press
Language: English
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CC BY
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: Prosody
- Chapter 3: Segmental phonology
- Chapter 4: Morphological patterns and word classes
- Chapter 5: Nominals I: Nouns
- Chapter 6: Nominals II: Pronouns
- Chapter 7: Adjectivals
- Chapter 8: Verbs
- Chapter 9: Other word classes
- Chapter 10: Derivational morphology
- Chapter 11: Phrase types
Ancillary Material
Submit ancillary resourceAbout the Book
Pite Saami is a highly endangered Western Saami language in the Uralic language family currently spoken by a few individuals in Swedish Lapland. This grammar is the first extensive book-length treatment of a Saami language written in English. While focusing on the morphophonology of the main word classes nouns, adjectives and verbs, it also deals with other linguistic structures such as prosody, phonology, phrase types and clauses. Furthermore, it provides an introduction to the language and its speakers, and an outline of a preliminary Pite Saami orthography. An extensive annotated spoken-language corpus collected over the course of five years forms the empirical foundation for this description, and each example includes a specific reference to the corpus in order to facilitate verification of claims made on the data. Descriptions are presented for a general linguistics audience and without attempting to support a specific theoretical approach, but this book should be equally useful for scholars of Uralic linguistics, typologists, and even learners of Pite Saami.
About the Contributors
Author
Joshua Wilbur completed his MA in General Linguistics and American Studies at the University of Leipzig before receiving his PhD from Christian-Albrechts University in Kiel in 2013. He has been doing documentary field work on Pite Saami since 2008, and is currently a post-doc researcher at the Scandinavian Studies Department at the University of Freiburg as part of the Freiburg Research Group in Saami Studies. In addition to endangered languages, his interests include morphophonology, documentary linguistics, corpus linguistics, grammaticography, lexicography and language contact.