Realis converbs and irrealis converbs in Hwari Tibetan
This article analyzes the realis converbs and irrealis converbs in Hwari (Dpa’ ris) Tibetan, an
Amdo Tibetan dialect spoken in Tianzhu Tibetan Autonomous County, Wuwei City, Gansu Province, China. One peculiarity of Hwari
Tibetan morphosyntax is the existence of a large set of converbal suffixes. A survey of previous descriptions reveals a lack of
consensus in the analysis of these converbs. They have been included in the framework of Written Tibetan too often, which has led
to confusion regarding their typological status. A primary objective of our paper is to rectify this approach by describing the
language on its own terms by comparing the morphosyntactic behavior of eight selected suffixes with regard to relevant criteria,
such as realis and irrealis. This empirical research feeds back into the theoretical discussion, as it shows that the Hwari
Tibetan converbs can be described using conventional typological concepts if construed appropriately. Our second objective is to
explain the semantic and pragmatic properties of these converbs, particularly -na and -ta. The
conclusion is that the two converb types are located along a continuum from realis/irrealis to positive/negative, thus
constituting an instantiation of syntax-semantics isomorphism. The clause chaining in Hwari Tibetan is representative. By
describing the converbs in Hwari Tibetan from the perspective of realis and irrealis, and by focusing on the syntactic properties
and pragmatic features of -Ce in realis converbs and -Ca in irrealis converbs, it is revealed that the irrealis converbs
-na and -ta function in a unique way in Hwari Tibetan.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Converbs in Hwari Tibetan
- 3.Realis converbs and irrealis converbs
- 3.1The syntactic properties of realis Ce
- 3.1.1The preceding clause acts as an adverbial
- 3.1.2Expressing positive habitual events in real life
- 3.1.3Connecting actions or events
- 3.1.4Forming a double negative
- 3.2The syntactic properties of irrealis Ca
- 3.2.1The former action is the purpose of the latter
- 3.2.2Change of status
- 3.2.3
-na is added after the preceding clause to connect the clauses and express assumption
- 3.2.4
-na is added after the perfective verb form to emphasize ‘contrary to one’s wishes’ and ‘contra-expectation’
- 3.3Imperative
- 3.3.1Imperative verb+ Ca+ thoŋ for emphasis
- 3.3.2Imperative verb + ‑ta for polite imperatives
- 3.3.3Concession (the clauses could both be finite and form a compound sentence)
- 4.Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
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Abbreviations
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References