Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of tables
- List of figures
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter One introduction
- Chapter Two segmental phonology
- Chapter Three morphophonology
- Chapter Four nouns and noun classes
- Chapter Five indicative mood and basic verbal morphology
- Chapter Six adjectives and inalienable nouns
- Chapter Seven pronouns, demonstratives, anaphors, deictics
- Chapter Eight optative, counterfactual and exercitive moods
- Chapter Nine number
- Chapter Ten adverbs and postpositional phrases
- Chapter Eleven complex predicates
- Chapter Twelve experiencer constructions
- Chapter Thirteen objects and possession
- Chapter Fourteen complement clauses
- Chapter Fifteen subjunctive verbs
- Chapter Sixteen middle voice
- Chapter Seventeen discourse cohesion
- Chapter Eighteen kinship terms
- Appendices
- References
Chapter Seven - pronouns, demonstratives, anaphors, deictics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of tables
- List of figures
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter One introduction
- Chapter Two segmental phonology
- Chapter Three morphophonology
- Chapter Four nouns and noun classes
- Chapter Five indicative mood and basic verbal morphology
- Chapter Six adjectives and inalienable nouns
- Chapter Seven pronouns, demonstratives, anaphors, deictics
- Chapter Eight optative, counterfactual and exercitive moods
- Chapter Nine number
- Chapter Ten adverbs and postpositional phrases
- Chapter Eleven complex predicates
- Chapter Twelve experiencer constructions
- Chapter Thirteen objects and possession
- Chapter Fourteen complement clauses
- Chapter Fifteen subjunctive verbs
- Chapter Sixteen middle voice
- Chapter Seventeen discourse cohesion
- Chapter Eighteen kinship terms
- Appendices
- References
Summary
Substitution
This chapter is concerned primarily with anaphora and deixis in Worrorra, involving the substitution of a set of replacement forms for other expressions. The expressions usually substituted for in Worrorra are noun phrases and sentences, the replacement forms comprising a lexical category of pronouns, including demonstrative pronouns.
Worrorra pronouns and demonstratives make primary reference to the substantive person, number and gender categories or agreement classes whose tokens, as inflexional (§5.3.1) and derivational (§6.1) NP indices, have already been encountered. The grammar treats sentences and sentential complements of all sorts as if they were celestial, or occasionally terrestrial nouns (§4.1.3 (iii)). While these person-and-number categories are evidenced widely in the morphology, this chapter is concerned primarily with their manifestation as lexical words.
Because of the small number of Worrorra speakers, I have not been able to observe much of the indexical use of person-and-number categories, that may have pertained between different classes of kin, between different age groups, between men and women, or in various social circumstances and ritual contexts. The material presented in this chapter, therefore, suffers from that deficiency. One observation, however, may be noted here, and that has to do with a function that I will refer to as diffuse reference.
Diffuse reference is found in euphemistic constructions used in referring to socially or physically dangerous things. Such reference is signalled by the use of the third person plural category, especially in situations where other categories could be expected. The use of the non-participant third person category precludes dangerous things from being represented in the speech event itself, that is to say, third person reference enables people to undertake a speech act while yet excluding unwanted things from participating in the act.
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- Information
- WorrorraALanguage of the North-West Kimberley Coast, pp. 154 - 180Publisher: The University of Adelaide PressPrint publication year: 2014