Geomorphic coding in Palula and Kalasha

Jan Heegård, Henrik Liljegren

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The article describes the geomorphic systems of spatial reference in the two Indo-Aryan languages Palula and Kalasha, spoken in adjacent areas of an alpine region in Northwestern Pakistan. Palula and Kalasha encode the inclination of the mountain slope as well as the flow of the river, in systematic and similar ways, and by use of distinct sets of nominal lexemes that may function adverbially. In their verbal systems, only Palula encode, landscape features in a systematic way, but both languages make use of a number of verbal sets that in different ways emphasise boundary-crossing. The article relates the analysis to Palmer's Topographic Correspondence Hypothesis that predicts that the linguistic system of spatial reference will reflect the topography of the surrounding landscape. The analysis of the geomorphic systems in Palula and Kalasha supports this hypothesis. However, data from a survey of spatial strategies in neighbouring languages, i.e., languages spoken in a similar alpine landscape, reveal another system that does not to the same extent or in a similar way encode typical landscape features such as the mountain slope and the flow of the river. This calls for a revision of Palmer's hypothesis that also takes language contact into consideration.

Translated title of the contributionGeomorfisk kodning i palula og kalasha
Original languageEnglish
JournalActa Hafniensia Linguistica, International journal of linguistics
Volume50
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)129-160
ISSN0374-0463
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Jul 2018

Keywords

  • Faculty of Humanities

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