Central Eurasian Language Grammars First Attempt
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<accesscontrol>CELG</accesscontrol> This page is for organising the first release in a potential set of volumes subsumed under the tentative Central Eurasian Language Grammars project.
Coverage of Topics
Following is a list of topics which should be covered by the grammar of each language:
- A reasonably complete account of the phonemic inventory, allophones, etc.
- An account of interesting productive or semi-productive phonological processes (like vowel harmony, consonant assimilation, etc.)
- A nearly complete survey of the language's morphology, including reference to morpho-phonology and semantics of morphology covered (e.g. the general uses of each case morpheme, tense/mood/aspect/voice of each tense morpheme, etc). These should be covered more from a holistic semantic (top-down) view than from a morpheme-by-morpheme view (bottom-up) (e.g., individual uses of a single morpheme shouldn't be listed, but rather a given use should be included where appropriate). I think
- Accounts of syntactic topics of interest and relevance to Central Asia, such as quotatives, relative clauses, questions, etc.
- Examples of the language in use. Probably one prose text in a modern literary variety, one transcription of spontaneous spoken language (be it conversation or monologue?), and one oral or textual example of verse.
Languages proposed
Justification
The justification for including the languages proposed here is that they're all large (medium density—in this case, they all have at least ½ million speakers, but no more than 25 million), and they're all in the heart of Central Asia (e.g., not Tatar or Sakha or any Uralic languages).
The languages, by family
Turkic
- Uzbek
- UNESCO status: none
- 23.5M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Who (idea): John Erickson
- Kazakh
- UNESCO status: none
- 12M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Who (last resort): Jonathan
- Uyghur
- UNESCO status: none
- 10M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Who (idea): Arienne Dwyer (recommended by Mahire Yakup (recommended by Eric Schluessel))
- Who (other recommendations by Eric): "Reyhangul Abliz (Professor at Xinjiang Agricultural University, co-author of Uyghur: A manual for conversation and De Jong's grammar) rayhan10@hotmail.com, tell her I sent you; Abdurishit Yakup (in Germany, wrote an excellent grammar of Turpan Uyghur); Mahire Yakup (at University of Kansas, teaches Uyghur at SWSEEL, PhD student); Frederick de Jong (very, very senior professor at Utrecht, produced the above-mentioned learner's grammar of Uyghur with Reyhangul and others), frederick.dejong@let.uu.nl, again, tell him I sent you..."
- Who (idea): Niko
- Turkmen
- UNESCO status: none
- 9M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Kyrgyz
- UNESCO status: none
- 3.5M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Who (current gramar draft): Jonathan
- Uzbeki (Afghan Uzbek)
- UNESCO status: none
- 1,451,980 speakers (estimate, ethnologue)
- Qaraqalpaq
- UNESCO status: none
- 0.5M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
Mongolic
- Khalkha
- UNESCO status: none
- 2.6M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Who (current grammar draft): Andrew
Tibeto-Burman
- Khams Tibetan
- UNESCO status: none
- 1.5M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Amdo Tibetan
- UNESCO status: none
- 800'000 speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Who (idea): Arienne Dwyer
IE
- Pashto
- UNESCO status: none
- ~26M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)
- Dari
- UNESCO status: none
- 7.6M speakers (estimate, ethnologue)
- Tajik
- UNESCO status: none
- 4.5M speakers (estimate, wikipedia)