Repititive, iterative and habitual aspectual affixes in West Greenlandic

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Abstract

In West Greenlandic, there are about 50 to 60 derivational aspectual affixes, and some of them have more than one meaning: a concrete meaning and a temporal meaning. The aspectual affixes are divided into quantitative aspect and phasal aspect. The phasal aspectual affixes are further divided into "inner" phasal aspectual affixes with a verb-modifying function and scope over the verb stem, and "outer" phasal aspectual affixes with a sentence-modifying function and scope over the sentence. Most of the tense affixes are polysemous and also belong to both inner and outer phasal aspects such as -ler begin, be about to, near future. Among the quantitative aspectual affixes, a group of aspectual affixes contain an iterative/habitual/repetitive meaning. Of these, the most general affix is -tar/-sar, which seems to contain iterative, habitual, generic and gnomic meanings. According to Kristoffersen, -sar has a verb-modifying function with scope over the verbal stem, and a sentence-modifying function with scope over the sentence. There are a few other aspectual affixes with meanings that suggest iteration and repeated action, such as -llattaar from time to time, -qattaar repeatedly etc., where the meanings are more concrete, purely aspectual and seem to be only verb-modifying compared to -tar/-sar habitually, which has a more general and tense-like meaning. In this paper, I examine the contexts in which the more concrete iterative/repetitive meanings are used in comparison to the more general repetitive and habitual meanings of -tar/-sar, and the combination of -tar/-sar with other affixes of iteration and repetition.

Original languageEnglish
JournalActa Hafniensia Linguistica, International journal of linguistics
Volume44
Issue number1 (2012)
Pages (from-to)64–76
Number of pages13
ISSN0374-0463
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2012

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