Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:21:21.398Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

REVIEW ARTICLE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2005

Extract

R. M. W. Dixon, Australian Languages: Their nature and development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. Pp. xlii, 734. Hb $95.00.

Australian languages is a typological approach to the description and historical study of the Aboriginal languages of Australia. Together with its planned companion volume, Australian languages: A complete catalogue, a collection of sketches of some 250 languages, it is intended to present non-Australianist scholars with comprehensive information about Aboriginal languages and to offer specialists a summary and an agenda for future research. There are 14 chapters: “The language situation in Australia,” “Modelling the language situation,” “Overview,” “Vocabulary,” “Case and other nominal suffixes,” “Verbs,” “Pronouns,” “Bound pronouns,” “Prefixing and fusion,” “Generic nouns, classifiers, genders and noun classes,” “Ergative/accusative morphological and syntactic profiles,” “Phonology,” “Genetic subgroups and small linguistic areas,” and “Summary and conclusion.”

Type
Review Article
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Alpher, Barry (1990). Some Proto-Pama-Nyungan paradigms: A verb in the hand is worth two in the phylum. In G. N. O'Grady & D. Tryon (eds.), Studies in comparative Pama-Nyungan. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, 15571.
Alpher, Barry (2004). Pama-Nyungan: phonological reconstruction and status as a phylogenetic group. In Bowern & Koch, 93–126, 387–570, 681–686.CrossRef
Alpher, Barry; Evans, Nicholas; & Harvey, Mark (2003). Proto Gunwinyguan verb suffixes. In Evans, 30552.
Alpher, Barry, & Nash, David (1999). Lexical replacement and cognate equilibrium in Australia. Australian Journal of Linguistics 19:556.Google Scholar
Anderson, Stephen R. (1988). Morphological change. In Newmeyer, 32462.
Birdsell, Joseph (1950). Some implications for the genetic concept of race in terms of spatial analysis”. Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology 15:259314.Google Scholar
Birdsell, Joseph (1953). Some environmental and cultural factors influencing the structure of Australian Aboriginal populations. American Naturalist 87.834:171207.Google Scholar
Birdsell, Joseph (1957). Some population problems concerning Pleistocene man. Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology 22:4769.Google Scholar
Bowern, Claire (2004). Bardi verb morphology in historical perspective. Dissertation, Harvard University.
Bowern, Claire, & Koch, Harold (2004). Introduction: Subgrouping methodology in historical linguistics. In Bowern &Koch (eds.), 115.CrossRef
Bowern, Claire, & Koch, Harold (2004) (eds.). Australian languages: Classification and the comparative method. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Dixon, R. M. W. (1980). The languages of Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Evans, Nicholas (2003). Introduction: Comparative non-Pama-Nyungan and Australian historical linguistics. In Evans (ed.), 125.
Evans, Nicholas (2003) (ed.). The Non-Pama-Nyungan languages of northern Australia: Comparative studies of the continent's linguistically most complex region. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
Harvey, Mark (2003). An initial reconstruction of Proto Gunwinyguan phonology. In Evans, 20568.
Hudson, Joyce (1978). The core of Walmajarri grammar. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Press.
Keen, Ian (1995). Metaphor and the metalanguage: Groups in Northeast Arnhem Land. American Ethnologist 22:50227.Google Scholar
Kiparsky, Paul (1988). Phonological change. In Newmeyer, 363415.
Koch, Harold (2004). A methodological history of Australian linguistic classification. In Bowern &Koch (eds.), 1760.
Newmeyer, Frederick J. (1988). Linguistics: The Cambridge survey, vol. 1, Linguistic theory: Foundations. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press
Rigsby, Bruce; Powell, Fiona; Sackett, Lee; Taylor, John C.; & Wood, Mike (2002). Expert report: Combined Gunggandji and Mandingalbay Yidinji (Q6016/01) native title claim. A report to the North Queensland Land Council, July 2002.
Rumsey, Alan (1993). Language and territoriality in Aboriginal Australia. In M. Walsh & C. Yallop (eds.), Language and culture in Aboriginal Australia. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, 191206.
Sutton, Peter (1978). Wik. Dissertation, University of Queensland, Brisbane.
Sutton, Peter (1991). Language in Aboriginal Australia: Social dialects in a geographic idiom. In Suzanne Romaine (ed.), Language in Australia, 4966. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRef
Sutton, Peter (1998). Native title and the descent of rights. Perth: National Native Title Tribunal.
Tindale, Norman B. (1940). Distribution of Australian Aboriginal tribes: A field survey. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, Adelaide 64.1:140231 and map.Google Scholar
Tindale, Norman B. (1974). Aboriginal tribes of Australia: Their terrain, environmental controls, distribution, limits, and proper names. Berkeley: University of California Press.