References - Book Voorhoeve-1965
. 1965. The Flamingo Bay Dialect of the Asmat Language
[other formats]| Publisher: | M. Nijhoff |
| Series: | Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal, Land en Volkenkunde |
| Volume: | 46 |
WALS Languages:
Referenced in:
- 4A Voicing in Plosives and Fricatives
- 9A The Velar Nasal
- 28A Case Syncretism
- 91A Order of Degree Word and Adjective
- 49A Number of Cases
- 16A Weight Factors in Weight-Sensitive Stress Systems
- 85A Order of Adposition and Noun Phrase
- 65A Perfective/Imperfective Aspect
- 101A Expression of Pronominal Subjects
- 20A Fusion of Selected Inflectional Formatives
- 3A Consonant-Vowel Ratio
- 41A Distance Contrasts in Demonstratives
- 79A Suppletion According to Tense and Aspect
- 100A Alignment of Verbal Person Marking
- 5A Voicing and Gaps in Plosive Systems
- 143A Order of Negative Morpheme and Verb
- 29A Syncretism in Verbal Person/Number Marking
- 143E Preverbal Negative Morphemes
- 50A Asymmetrical Case-Marking
- 90A Order of Relative Clause and Noun
- 143F Postverbal Negative Morphemes
- 70A The Morphological Imperative
- 21B Exponence of Tense-Aspect-Mood Inflection
- 112A Negative Morphemes
- 98A Alignment of Case Marking of Full Noun Phrases
- 19A Presence of Uncommon Consonants
- 82A Order of Subject and Verb
- 66A The Past Tense
- 11A Front Rounded Vowels
- 78A Coding of Evidentiality
- 14A Fixed Stress Locations
- 30A Number of Genders
- 87A Order of Adjective and Noun
- 107A Passive Constructions
- 26A Prefixing vs. Suffixing in Inflectional Morphology
- 1A Consonant Inventories
- 43A Third Person Pronouns and Demonstratives
- 94A Order of Adverbial Subordinator and Clause
- 136A M-T Pronouns
- 136B M in First Person Singular
- 114A Subtypes of Asymmetric Standard Negation
- 48A Person Marking on Adpositions
- 102A Verbal Person Marking
- 17A Rhythm Types
- 106A Reciprocal Constructions
- 37A Definite Articles
- 27A Reduplication
- 89A Order of Numeral and Noun
- 72A Imperative-Hortative Systems
- 2A Vowel Quality Inventories
- 137B M in Second Person Singular
- 137A N-M Pronouns
- 81A Order of Subject, Object and Verb
- 32A Systems of Gender Assignment
- 59A Possessive Classification
- 111A Nonperiphrastic Causative Constructions
- 24A Locus of Marking in Possessive Noun Phrases
- 45A Politeness Distinctions in Pronouns
- 12A Syllable Structure
- 92A Position of Polar Question Particles
- 69A Position of Tense-Aspect Affixes
- 51A Position of Case Affixes
- 88A Order of Demonstrative and Noun
- 86A Order of Genitive and Noun
- 104A Order of Person Markers on the Verb
- 31A Sex-based and Non-sex-based Gender Systems
- 58B Number of Possessive Nouns
- 58A Obligatory Possessive Inflection
- 74A Situational Possibility
- 116A Polar Questions
- 144P NegSOV Order
- 144Q SNegOV Order
- 144R SONegV Order
- 144S SOVNeg Order
- 8A Lateral Consonants
- 25B Zero Marking of A and P Arguments
- 25A Locus of Marking: Whole-language Typology
- 15A Weight-Sensitive Stress
- 144A Position of Negative Word With Respect to Subject, Object, and Verb
- 144B Position of negative words relative to beginning and end of clause and with respect to adjacency to verb
- 144L The Position of Negative Morphemes in SOV Languages
- 113A Symmetric and Asymmetric Standard Negation
- 83A Order of Object and Verb
- 103A Third Person Zero of Verbal Person Marking
- 6A Uvular Consonants
- 33A Coding of Nominal Plurality
- 77A Semantic Distinctions of Evidentiality
- 22A Inflectional Synthesis of the Verb
- 67A The Future Tense
- 18A Absence of Common Consonants
- 47A Intensifiers and Reflexive Pronouns
- 10A Vowel Nasalization
- 57A Position of Pronominal Possessive Affixes
- 80A Verbal Number and Suppletion
- 7A Glottalized Consonants
- 90B Prenominal relative clauses
- 23A Locus of Marking in the Clause
- 143G Minor morphological means of signaling negation
- 76A Overlap between Situational and Epistemic Modal Marking
- 44A Gender Distinctions in Independent Personal Pronouns
- 13A Tone
- 21A Exponence of Selected Inflectional Formatives
- 68A The Perfect
- 93A Position of Interrogative Phrases in Content Questions
