|
Inalienable possession
In linguistics, inalienable possession refers to the linguistic properties of certain nouns or nominal morphemes based on the fact that they are always possessed.
More »
Go to: Wikipedia · Ask Encyclopedia
Search for: Related Q&A · Images · Videos
|
|
Inalienable possessions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inalienable_possessions
The concept of Inalienable Possessions coined from Annette Weiner's observation regarding the many objects of the Trobriand islanders who view those objects ... |
||
|
Possession (linguistics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Possession_(linguistics)
There are many types of possession, but a common distinction is alienable versus inalienable possession. Alienability ... |
||
particular, what has come to be known as an inalienable possession relation is ... Other languages limit the notion of inalienable possession strictly to physical ...
|
||
Inalienable Possessions tests anthropology's traditional assumptions about kinship, economics, power, and gender in an exciting challenge to accepted theories ...
|
||
Inalienable nouns (=bodypart/kinship terms) very often occur as possessed .... ( 37) In no language will the phonological expression of inalienable possession ...
|
|
|
4 Issues per year. Increased IMPACT FACTOR 2010: 1.021 ...
|
||
Inalienable possession (opposed to alienable possession) in linguistics is a relationship between two objects indicating that they are (possibly on a ...
|
||
Some languages exhibit differential marking between inalienable possession and alienable possession (Nichols 1988, Heine 1997). Inalienable constructions ...
|
||
This essay interprets the relation between inalienable possessions and per- sonhood ... The last two sections treat inalienable possession in terms of life- cycle ...
|
