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    The Categorical Status and Functions of Auxiliaries in Shona

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    Date
    2006
    Author
    Mberi, Nhira Edgar
    Type
    Book
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    Abstract
    The study examines auxiliaries in Shona. One of the most problematic issues when dealing with auxiliaries not only in Shona but also in many languages of the world is the question of their categorical status. This study argues that the taxonomic problems associated with auxiliaries in Shona are largely a result of the use of traditional approaches to linguistic categorization. Even the use of structurist and generative approaches in the last thirty years or so has not done much towards resolving the problems associated with the categorical status of auxiliaries in Shona. This study moves away from this classical treatment of grammatical categories, which is mainly based on necessary and suffi cient conditions. It uses the gradience approach which argues that there is no distinct boundary between auxiliaries and lexical verbs. The study uses the grammaticalization theory to account for the nature and behavior of auxiliaries. It argues that auxiliaries in Shona, like in many other languages, have historically developed from main lexical verbs. Having established that auxiliaries historically develop from main lexical verbs an attempt is made to try and discover the pathways of changes that may have taken place when verbs grammaticalize in Shona. In this effort to characterize the set of verbs that change from the major lexical category to the minor category, the study takes the cognitive approach. This approach takes the view that the meaning of the verb that is being grammaticalized uniquely determines the path of grammaticalization and consequently the resulting grammatical forms. According to this view, the grammaticalization of verbs into auxiliaries is a problem-solving process which involves metaphorical extention and metonymic extension. The cognitive explanation of the motivation of grammaticalization revolves around what cognitivists refer to as the basic human strategy of dealing with our environment, that is, conceiving of and expressing experiences that are less accessible or more difficult to understand or describe in terms of more accessible concrete experiences. The metaphorical and metonymic extention involves movement from one conceptual domain to another in a unidirectional process, moving from concete domains to abstract domains.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10646/552
    Additional Citation Information
    Mberi, Nhira E. The Categorical Status and Functions of Auxiliaries in Shona. Oslo: Allex Project, 2006.
    Sponsor
    The Norwergian State Education Loan Fund (Lånekassen)and NUFU provided funding.
    Publisher
    Allex Project
    Subject
    Shona language
    Bantu Language
    idioms
    Additional Notes
    A dissertation submitted to the department of African languages and literature of the University of Zimbambwe in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, June, 2002. The supervisors for this dissertation were Professor Rolf Theil Endresen and Professor Herbert Chimhundu
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