This book argues against the existence of complementation in colloquial Indonesian, and discusses the ramifications of these findings for a discourse-functional understanding of grammatical categories and linguistic structure. Based on a close analysis of a corpus of spontaneous conversational Indonesian data, the author examines four construction types which express what is often encoded by complements in other languages: juxtaposed clauses, material introduced by the discourse marker bahwa , serial verbs, and epistemic expressions with the suffix -nya . These four construction types offer no evidence to support complementation as a viable grammatical category in colloquial spoken Indonesian. Rather, they are best understood as emergent, discourse-level phenomena, arising from the interactive and communicative goals of language users. The lack of evidence for complementation in colloquial Indonesian reaffirms the need to understand linguistic structure as language-particular and diverse, and emphasizes the centrality of studying linguistic categories based on their actual occurrence in natural discourse.
ISBN: | 9789027226235 |
Publication date: | 10th April 2003 |
Author: | Robert Englebretson |
Publisher: | John Benjamins Publishing Company |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 215 pages |
Series: | Studies in Discourse and Grammar |
Genres: |
Grammar, syntax and morphology |