thethief3 wrote: ↑Sat Sep 05, 2020 1:34 am
I should probably tell you the languages "linkers" inflect for the gender of the noun they modify and that if multiple adjectives modify a noun it requires multiple linkers. The linkers also have negative forms to express when something is not alike which can co-occur with positive linkers in the same noun phrase. Is this naturalistic i like it because it leads to a great deal of specification so i think its a useful system.
bí hana’n nara
DEF-F flower LNK woman
“The beautiful woman”
bí hana'n zúra ina ʎi
DEF-F flower LNK storm LNK-NEG 3-SG
“She was beautiful and not angry”
e norao'l norao'l básu
INDEF-M good LNK good LNK boy
“A very good boy”
That sounds fairly similar adjectival classifiers (which I mentioned briefly at the end of my post), as found in e.g. Thai:
- nók
- bird
- tua
- CL:BODY
- sĭi-khĭaw
- green
- tua
- CL:BODY
- jàj
- big
The big green bird
This sort of system is also found in Terêna, Yawalapiti, Kilivila, Newari, Waurá, Cantonese, Yagua etc., so it’s actually fairly common. One subtlety is that, in all systems I know of, such classifiers are also used with other categories, most commonly numbers and demonstratives: I know of no language where classifiers are used
only for adjectives.
The only component of your system which I haven’t encountered before is the distinction between ‘positive’ and ‘negative’ classifiers. I haven’t heard of any language with such a system, but it doesn’t seem too implausible: if your negatives go after the head, you could get it diachronically by fusing ‘adj NEG LNK’ into ‘adj NEG.LNK’.