This volume presents the most wide-ranging treatment available today of the Malayo-Polynesian languages of Southeast Asia and their outliers. It offers a comprehensive account of the historical relations and typological diversity in the group, including current debates in their prehistories and descriptive priorities for future study.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Detailed contents
- Series preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and conventions
- The contributors
- 1: Alexander Adelaar and Antoinette Schapper: Introduction
- Part I: Historical Linguistics
- 2: Alexander D. Smith: Proto-Malayo-Polynesian: Its place within the Austronesian language family, reconstruction, and daughters
- 3: Malcolm Ross and Simon J. Greenhill: Methods in Malayo-Polynesian comparative-historical linguistics
- 4: Robert Blust: Linguistic approaches to Austronesian culture history
- 5: François-Xavier Ricaut, Nicolas Brucato, and Murray P. Cox: Human genetic approaches to Malayo-Polynesian prehistory
- 6: Hsiao-chun Hung and Peter Bellwood: Archaeological correlations for the dispersal of the Malayo-Polynesian languages of Southeast Asia, western Micronesia and Madagascar
- 7: R. David Zorc, Jason W. Lobel, and William Hall: Historical linguistics of the Philippines
- 8: Alexander D. Smith: Historical linguistics of Borneo
- 9: Karl Anderbeck: Historical linguistics of the Malayic subgroup
- 10: Alexander Adelaar: Historical linguistics of the languages of Sumatra, Java, the Lesser Sunda Islands, and Moken Moklen
- 11: Marc Brunelle: Historical linguistics of the Chamic languages
- 12: David Mead: Sulawesi historical linguistics
- 13: Erik Zobel: Historical linguistics of the Central Malayo-Polynesian languages
- 14: David Kamholz: Historical linguistics of the South Halmahera-West New Guinea subgroup
- Part II: Sociolinguistics and Language Contact
- 15: Michael C Ewing and Yukinori Kimoto: Vitality, maintenance, and documentation among the Malayo-Polynesian languages of Southeast Asia
- 16: David Gil: Multilingualism
- 17: Tom Hoogervorst: Language policy and the politics of language
- 18: Peter Slomanson: Malayo-Polynesian contact languages in Southeast Asia and the creole controversy
- 19: Francesca R Moro and Peter Slomanson: Heritage languages and the study of Malayo-Polynesian diasporas
- 20: Paul Sidwell: Language contact in Mainland Southeast Asia: Historical impacts on Malayo-Polynesian languages
- 21: Alexander Adelaar: Language contact in Africa
- 22: Antoinette Schapper: Papuan contact and its impact on Malayo-Polynesian languages
- 23: Tom Hoogervorst: Non-areal contact
- Part III: Areal Overviews
- 24: Hsiu-chuan Liao and Lawrence A. Reid: Languages of the northern Philippines
- 25: Daniel Kaufman: Languages of central and southern Philippines
- 26: Daniel Kaufman: Sama-Bajaw languages
- 27: Paul Kroeger: Non-Malayic languages of Borneo
- 28: Bradley McDonnell and Christina L. Truong: Non-Malayic languages of Sumatra and the Barrier Islands
- 29: Bradley McDonnell, Jiang Wu, Timothy McKinnon, Alexander Adelaar: Malayic languages
- 30: Marc Brunelle and Joshua Jensen: Chamic languages
- 31: Jozina Vander Klok: Languages of Java
- 32: Asako Shiohara and I Wayan Arka: Balinese, Sasak, and Sumbawa
- 33: René van den Berg and David Mead: Languages of Sulawesi
- 34: Naonori Nagaya: Languages of Flores and its satellites
- 35: Antoinette Schapper and Erik Zobel: Languages of Timor and southern Maluku
- 36: Charles E. Grimes: Languages of Central Maluku
- 37: Emily Gasser, Laura Arnold, and David Kamholz: The languages of Halmahera and West New Guinea
- 38: Erik Zobel: Chamorro
- 39: Erik Zobel: Palauan
- 40: Penelope Howe: Malagasy
- Part IV: Featural Overviews
- 41: Juliette Blevins: Segment inventories
- 42: Daniel Kaufman and Nikolaus P. Himmelmann: Suprasegmental phonology
- 43: Mark Donohue: Phonotactics and morphophonology
- 44: Mark Donohue and David Gil: Morphology
- 45: Veronika Mattes and Thomas Schwaiger: Reduplication
- 46: Mark Donohue: Word order
- 47: Paul Kroeger and Sonja Riesberg: Voice and transitivity
- 48: Antoinette Schapper and William McConvell: Adnominal possession
- 49: Gary Holton and Leah Pappas: Spatial orientation
- 50: Johan van der Auwera, Daniël Van Olmen, and Frens Vossen: Negation
- 51: Ljuba Veselinova, Leif Asplund, and Jozina Vander Klok: Phasal polarity
- 52: Alexander Adelaar and John Hajek: Personal pronouns
- References
- Index