The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut

This thesis presents and analyzes the tense system of South Baffin Inuktitut (SB), a Canadian variety of the Inuit language. It demonstrates that, although closely related dialects are argued to be tenseless (Shaer, 2003; Bittner, 2005), SB has a complex tense system where the present, past, and fut...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hayashi, Midori
Other Authors: Johns, Alana
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/27581
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:OTU.1807/27581 2023-05-15T15:35:36+02:00 The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut Hayashi, Midori Johns, Alana 2011-03 http://hdl.handle.net/1807/27581 en_ca eng http://hdl.handle.net/1807/27581 tense Inuktitut 0290 Thesis 2011 ftcanadathes 2013-11-23T21:47:43Z This thesis presents and analyzes the tense system of South Baffin Inuktitut (SB), a Canadian variety of the Inuit language. It demonstrates that, although closely related dialects are argued to be tenseless (Shaer, 2003; Bittner, 2005), SB has a complex tense system where the present, past, and future are distinguished, and the future and past are divided into more fine-grained temporal domains. I demonstrate that SB has present tense, which is indicated by the absence of a tense marker. A sentence without an overt tense marker may describe a past eventuality if it contains a punctual event predicate; otherwise, it describes an eventuality that holds at the utterance time. I argue that all zero-marked sentences have present tense and any past interpretation is aspectual. I also investigate six different past markers and demonstrate that they all instantiate grammatical tense. The analysis shows that these markers can be semantically classified into two groups, depending in part on whether or not they block more general tenses (e.g., -qqau, the ‘today’ past blocks the use of the general past -lauq when the time of eventuality falls within ‘today’). I label both the general tenses and the group which can block the general tenses as primary tense, whereas the other group which does not block more general tenses is labelled secondary tense. This distinction may have broad cross-linguistic applicability. I examine the distribution of four different future markers and argue that three of them indicate grammatical future tense. They are also grouped into two groups, in the same manner as the past tenses. Finally, I analyse the temporal interpretations of primary tenses in dependent clauses. I show that when tense is interpreted relative to the time of the superordinate eventuality, the domain of tense may not necessarily shift accordingly (e.g., the domain of hodiernal tense in a main clause is the day of utterance, and in an embedded clause the domain can still be the day of utterance). Embedded tenses with remoteness specifications have not been investigated before, and this thesis opens up a new area to our understanding of tenses in human language. Thesis Baffin inuit inuktitut Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language English
topic tense
Inuktitut
0290
spellingShingle tense
Inuktitut
0290
Hayashi, Midori
The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut
topic_facet tense
Inuktitut
0290
description This thesis presents and analyzes the tense system of South Baffin Inuktitut (SB), a Canadian variety of the Inuit language. It demonstrates that, although closely related dialects are argued to be tenseless (Shaer, 2003; Bittner, 2005), SB has a complex tense system where the present, past, and future are distinguished, and the future and past are divided into more fine-grained temporal domains. I demonstrate that SB has present tense, which is indicated by the absence of a tense marker. A sentence without an overt tense marker may describe a past eventuality if it contains a punctual event predicate; otherwise, it describes an eventuality that holds at the utterance time. I argue that all zero-marked sentences have present tense and any past interpretation is aspectual. I also investigate six different past markers and demonstrate that they all instantiate grammatical tense. The analysis shows that these markers can be semantically classified into two groups, depending in part on whether or not they block more general tenses (e.g., -qqau, the ‘today’ past blocks the use of the general past -lauq when the time of eventuality falls within ‘today’). I label both the general tenses and the group which can block the general tenses as primary tense, whereas the other group which does not block more general tenses is labelled secondary tense. This distinction may have broad cross-linguistic applicability. I examine the distribution of four different future markers and argue that three of them indicate grammatical future tense. They are also grouped into two groups, in the same manner as the past tenses. Finally, I analyse the temporal interpretations of primary tenses in dependent clauses. I show that when tense is interpreted relative to the time of the superordinate eventuality, the domain of tense may not necessarily shift accordingly (e.g., the domain of hodiernal tense in a main clause is the day of utterance, and in an embedded clause the domain can still be the day of utterance). Embedded tenses with remoteness specifications have not been investigated before, and this thesis opens up a new area to our understanding of tenses in human language.
author2 Johns, Alana
format Thesis
author Hayashi, Midori
author_facet Hayashi, Midori
author_sort Hayashi, Midori
title The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut
title_short The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut
title_full The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut
title_fullStr The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut
title_full_unstemmed The Structure of Multiple Tenses in Inuktitut
title_sort structure of multiple tenses in inuktitut
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/27581
genre Baffin
inuit
inuktitut
genre_facet Baffin
inuit
inuktitut
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/27581
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