HC56:
Language as a Window to the
Mind
Welcome to the
Kampotak
Page!
This page will
be updated as more
information about Kampotak is discovered.
You will
need the Gentium font to view the IPA
symbols
correctly. Having trouble?
This page is maintained by Sameer ud Dowla Khan. Last updated
4 March 2006.
Syntax
Kampotak [kãmboda] is a
strictly head-initial language.
All heads precede their complements.
Here are two image files of a basic
tree a for head-initial language like Kampotak. With X' Without X'
After the subject of the sentence, the verb will
precede its complement (the direct object), giving us SVO word order.
Here are two image files of a typical
SVO sentence in Kampotak. With X' Without X'
Word order can change due to processes such as wh-movement, where wh-words are
raised to the specifier of the CP.
Here is an image file of a Kampotak
sentence with wh-words before movement.
Here is an image file of the same
sentence after the question particle addition and wh-movement have
taken place.
The
Verb Phrase (VP)
VP --> V'
V' --> V (NP) (PP) (CP)
The VP has only one daughter, the V'.
The V' has two daughers. One is the head V, which is basically the verb
(minus the tense morpheme, which is the head of I). The other daughter
is the complement of that V, if there is one. This complement can be a
direct object (NP), a prepositional phrase (PP), or an embedded
sentence (CP). Adjectival predicates (adjectives that in English would
require the verb 'to be') act as if they were verbs on their own. See
the morphology page for more
information,
The
Noun Phrase (NP)
NP --> (NP) N'
N' --> N (AP) (PP) (CP)
The NP only has at least one daughter, the N'. If the head noun is
possessed by another noun, then the possessor noun branches off as the
specifier of the possessed NP.
The N' has at least one daughter, one of which is the head N (the noun,
pronoun, or name), while the others are descriptions of that noun. They
are all optional. They include any adjectival, prepositional, or
sentential complements that describe it.
The
Prepositional Phrase (PP)
PP --> P'
P' --> P NP
The PP only has one daughter, the P'.
The P' has two daughters, one of which is the head P (the preposition
itself) and the other being the preposition's noun phrase complement.
The
Inflectional Phrase (IP)
IP --> NP IP
I' --> I VP
The IP has two daughters: one is the specifier of IP (the NP subject of
the sentence), and the other is the I'.
The I' has two daughters: the head I (which hosts only the tense
morpheme) and the VP complement (the rest of the verb phrase).
The
Complementizer Phrase (CP)
CP --> (wh) C'
C' --> C IP
The CP has two daughters: one is the specifier of CP, which can hold
wh-words (which arrive in that location as a result of wh-movement),
and the other is the C'.
The C' has two daughters: one is the head C, which can host either:
The complementizer,
which can signify the transition from the main sentence into an
embedded sentence (example tree),
Or the question
particle /har/, which can signify any type of question.
When used on its own, /har/
indicates that the sentence is a yes/no question.
When used in conjunction with
wh-movement, /har/ indicates that
the sentence is a wh-question (example tree).
The other daughter of the C' is the IP.
Click
on the following links for more
information:
Phonology
Lexicon
Morphology
Syntax