The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern Sotho

This article discusses one of the meanings expressed by the associative copulative construction with -na le, ‘have’ in Northern Sotho, namely to ‘physically experience discomfort’, ‘suffer from’ or ‘be ill with’ something. In light of alternative available verbs that are employed to express the same...

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Main Author: Mojapelo, Mampaka Lydia
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Stellenbosch University 2019-12-01
Series:Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/838
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spelling doaj-0002b387c4004c4eaef3c4b0de3346732020-11-25T03:21:23ZafrStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus1726-541X2224-33802019-12-015808910610.5842/58-0-838The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern SothoMojapelo, Mampaka Lydia0University of South Africa, South AfricaThis article discusses one of the meanings expressed by the associative copulative construction with -na le, ‘have’ in Northern Sotho, namely to ‘physically experience discomfort’, ‘suffer from’ or ‘be ill with’ something. In light of alternative available verbs that are employed to express the same concept in specific ways, this article aims to investigate the occurrence of such alternative verbs, their semantic relationship with -na le ‘have’ and with each other. A lexical semantics investigation involving verb classes, selectional restrictions and paradigmatic sense relations reveals that -na le ‘have’ functions as a superordinate in a troponymy relationship with these verbs. It also shows that these verbs are not on the same level in the hierarchical scheme, placing -bolaya ‘kill’, -tshwenya ‘trouble’ and -swara ‘catch’/ ‘hold’ just below -na le ‘have’ as they select both body-part and affliction arguments. The rest of the verbs are positioned on a lower level, selecting either body-part or affliction.https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/838associative copulativeverb classesbodily discomforttroponymynorthern sotho
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mojapelo, Mampaka Lydia
spellingShingle Mojapelo, Mampaka Lydia
The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern Sotho
Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
associative copulative
verb classes
bodily discomfort
troponymy
northern sotho
author_facet Mojapelo, Mampaka Lydia
author_sort Mojapelo, Mampaka Lydia
title The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern Sotho
title_short The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern Sotho
title_full The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern Sotho
title_fullStr The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern Sotho
title_full_unstemmed The associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in Northern Sotho
title_sort associative copulative and expression of bodily discomfort in northern sotho
publisher Stellenbosch University
series Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
issn 1726-541X
2224-3380
publishDate 2019-12-01
description This article discusses one of the meanings expressed by the associative copulative construction with -na le, ‘have’ in Northern Sotho, namely to ‘physically experience discomfort’, ‘suffer from’ or ‘be ill with’ something. In light of alternative available verbs that are employed to express the same concept in specific ways, this article aims to investigate the occurrence of such alternative verbs, their semantic relationship with -na le ‘have’ and with each other. A lexical semantics investigation involving verb classes, selectional restrictions and paradigmatic sense relations reveals that -na le ‘have’ functions as a superordinate in a troponymy relationship with these verbs. It also shows that these verbs are not on the same level in the hierarchical scheme, placing -bolaya ‘kill’, -tshwenya ‘trouble’ and -swara ‘catch’/ ‘hold’ just below -na le ‘have’ as they select both body-part and affliction arguments. The rest of the verbs are positioned on a lower level, selecting either body-part or affliction.
topic associative copulative
verb classes
bodily discomfort
troponymy
northern sotho
url https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/838
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