Diachronic stories of body-part nouns in some language families of South America

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Abstract

The present chapter deals with some well-attested diachronic developments of body-part nouns in languages belonging to a sample of language families of South America. Body-part nouns in these languages are often implicated in the development of locative adpositions, classifiers of different sorts, and body-part prefixes (as described for Panoan languages). This chapter argues that it is possible to postulate at least four different source constructions for these developments, including incorporated nouns, derivative compounds, generic genitives, and locative compounds. As shown in this chapter, there is an intrinsic relation between these constructions and body-part nouns, and this fact, in addition to the special cognitive nature of body-part expressions, may explain why these nouns undergo the grammaticalization processes described here. Due to its widespread distribution, the recruitment of body-part nouns for the development of grammatical elements such as adpositions, classifiers, and prefixes might be considered an areal feature of South American languages.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationGrammaticalization from a Typological Perspective
PublisherOxford University Press
Pages350-371
Number of pages22
ISBN (Electronic)9780198795841
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2018

Keywords

  • Adpositions
  • Body-part nouns
  • Body-part prefixes
  • Classifiers
  • Grammaticalization

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