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Patterns of Relative Clauses in Dagbanli
Author(s) -
Abdul-Razak Inusah
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
sage open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.357
H-Index - 32
ISSN - 2158-2440
DOI - 10.1177/2158244017692016
Subject(s) - relative clause , linguistics , head (geology) , determiner , antecedent (behavioral psychology) , pronoun , type (biology) , word order , mathematics , range (aeronautics) , subject (documents) , computer science , psychology , noun , philosophy , engineering , geology , paleontology , developmental psychology , geomorphology , aerospace engineering , library science
The article examines the patterns of relative clauses in Dagbanli, a Gur language spoken in northern part of Ghana. It focuses on a range of possible RC patterns, and presents a coherent classification using Vries’s model of RC types. The article argues that Dagbanli has two RC types which are characterized by shared features so “indefinite pronoun” that forms a compound with the nominal root, and maa or la “clause-final determiner.” The first RC type is restricted to cases in which the antecedent has subject function within the RC, and the other RC type occurs only with nonsubjects as relativized head making use of postsubjectival particle ni to mark subordinated clauses. It is proposed that Dagbanli has a postnominal word order of N . . . RC . . . D and allows D-type ([[Subj V Obj] D] RC) in-situ HIRC (Head Internal Relative Clause) as well HERC (Head External Relative Clause). It also presents ŋun “who” and ni “which” as question particles that are used to introduce relative clauses in Dagbanli.

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