A grammar of Yauyos Quechua

Aviva Shimelman

Keywords:

Yauyos, Quechua, endangered language, grammar

Synopsis

This book presents a synchronic grammar of the southern dialects of Yauyos, an extremely endangered Quechuan language spoken in the Peruvian Andes. As the language is highly synthetic, the grammar focuses principally on morphology; a longer section is dedicated to the language's unusual evidential system. The grammar's 1400 examples are drawn from a 24-hour corpus of transcribed recordings collected in the course of the documentation of the language.

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Author Biography

Aviva Shimelman

Aviva Shimelman earned a PhD in Linguistics from Université Laval and an MA in Political Science from the University of California at Berkeley. She has taught in California in the Linguistics Department at San José State University and in Merrill College at the University of California at Santa Cruz; in China, she taught in the School of Foreign Languages at Beijing Normal University, Zhuhai. She was a fellow for three years in the Documenting Endangered Languages program of the US National Endowment for the Humanities and National Science Foundation. She is currently working in Vanuatu on a project of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History documenting the languages of the island of Malekula.

Published

April 12, 2017
LaTeX source on GitHub

Print ISSN

2363-5568
Cite as
Shimelman, Aviva. 2017. A grammar of Yauyos Quechua. (Studies in Diversity Linguistics 9). Berlin: Language Science Press. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.376355

License

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Details about the available publication format: PDF

PDF

ISBN-13 (15)

978-3-946234-21-0

Publication date (01)

2017-03-31

doi

10.5281/zenodo.376355

Details about the available publication format: Hardcover

Hardcover

ISBN-13 (15)

978-3-946234-22-7