Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Strategies of Quantification in Hausa (Chadic)

View through CrossRef
AbstractThis chapter discusses some interesting properties of the adnominal quantificational system in the Chadic language Hausa. Its main objective is to introduce new empirical data into the discussion of quantification from a cross‐linguistic semantic perspective. Special attention is paid to (i) differences in the structural realization of weak (= modifying) and strong (= inherent) quantifying expressions; and (ii) the formation of (universal) quantifiers from a wh‐element and a disjunction marker (wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers), and the semantic interpretation of these quantifiers. In this chapter, I show that weak and strong quantifying expressions differ in their syntactic distribution, pointing at a fundamental semantic difference between both kinds of expressions. Wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers in Hausa are interesting in two respects: First, they appear to receive different interpretations (universal, free choice, existential) in different syntactic contexts. These different interpretations are argued to follow from a basic universal reading. Second, the interpretation of wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers varies across languages. They are interpreted with universal force in Hausa, but with existential force in Japanese and Malayalam. A cross‐linguistically unified analysis of wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers is shown to be possible in principle. At the same time, the possibility that wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers are interpreted by different interpretative mechanisms in different languages is not altogether excluded.
Oxford University PressOxford
Title: Strategies of Quantification in Hausa (Chadic)
Description:
AbstractThis chapter discusses some interesting properties of the adnominal quantificational system in the Chadic language Hausa.
Its main objective is to introduce new empirical data into the discussion of quantification from a cross‐linguistic semantic perspective.
Special attention is paid to (i) differences in the structural realization of weak (= modifying) and strong (= inherent) quantifying expressions; and (ii) the formation of (universal) quantifiers from a wh‐element and a disjunction marker (wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers), and the semantic interpretation of these quantifiers.
In this chapter, I show that weak and strong quantifying expressions differ in their syntactic distribution, pointing at a fundamental semantic difference between both kinds of expressions.
Wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers in Hausa are interesting in two respects: First, they appear to receive different interpretations (universal, free choice, existential) in different syntactic contexts.
These different interpretations are argued to follow from a basic universal reading.
Second, the interpretation of wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers varies across languages.
They are interpreted with universal force in Hausa, but with existential force in Japanese and Malayalam.
A cross‐linguistically unified analysis of wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers is shown to be possible in principle.
At the same time, the possibility that wh‐DISJ‐quantifiers are interpreted by different interpretative mechanisms in different languages is not altogether excluded.

Related Results

Hausa
Hausa
With an estimated population of up to 50 million, Hausa make up one of the largest people groups practicing Islam. Despite settlement of today’s Hausaland in the central Sudan by t...
Hausa
Hausa
The term “Hausa” refers to a language spoken by over thirty million first-language speakers living mainly in the region now comprising northern Nigeria and southern Niger, with lar...
Nazarin Tsarin Sauti a Wasu Zaurance Na Hausa
Nazarin Tsarin Sauti a Wasu Zaurance Na Hausa
Zaurance yana ɗaya daga cikin azancin da harshen Hausa ya yi fice da su wanda matasa musamman mata suke amfani da shi wajen sakaya zance ta hanyar sauya masa wasu fitattun kamannin...
Reflection of the Hausa Society in Hausa Tales
Reflection of the Hausa Society in Hausa Tales
Tales are to a certain extent the mirror of life, they reflect what people do, what they think, how they live and have lived, their values, their joys and their sorrows. The tales ...
Pragmatism in Hausa Oral Poetic Tradition
Pragmatism in Hausa Oral Poetic Tradition
The study suggests the craft of oration in the Ƙasar Hausa developed in traditional religious shrines around the vicinities of Dala, Durbi, Kwatarkashi and Turunku with priests as ...
Nazarin Hanyar Sadarwa Ta Girafiti A Karin Maganar Hausa
Nazarin Hanyar Sadarwa Ta Girafiti A Karin Maganar Hausa
Hanyoyin sadarwa domin isar da saƙonni sun kasu kasha daban-daban musamman idan aka yi la’akari da yanayin yadda akan sarrafa hanyoyin da kuma yanayin waɗanda akan isar wa saƙonnin...
Language Contact in the West Chadic Language Goemai
Language Contact in the West Chadic Language Goemai
Goemai is a West Chadic language of Northern Nigeria, which is at the heart of the Jos Plateau Sprachbund. This chapter explains the ways in which it has been influenced by other l...
A Phonological Analysis of Nouns Borrowed by Fulfulde from Hausa
A Phonological Analysis of Nouns Borrowed by Fulfulde from Hausa
This study is an aspect of the phonological analysis of words borrowed by Fulfulde from Hausa. The main objective of this research is: to identify the phonological features of word...

Back to Top