
A Grammar of Akajeru
Fragments of a traditional North Andamanese dialect
Raoul Zamponi (Author), Bernard Comrie (Author)
A Grammar of Akajeru describes aspects of the grammatical system and lexicon of Akajeru, a traditional dialect of the North Andamanese language, as it was reportedly used around the beginning of the twentieth century. It is based primarily on the fragments of this variety provided by the British anthropologist Alfred R. Radcliffe-Brown and scattered among the published results of his anthropological research carried out on the islands between 1906 and 1908. These are supplemented by published lists of 46 anatomical terms and 28 toponyms collected by Edward Horace Man, Officer in Charge of the Andamanese 1875–79.
The book provides a linguistic analysis of all the extant Akajeru material, plus items identified by Radcliffe-Brown as ‘North Andaman’ without further specification, his few records of Akabo and Akakhora and Man’s few records of Akakhora, which together constitute all the documentation of these other traditional North Andamanese dialects. It includes a grammatical sketch of Akajeru, a list of all the words that were recorded, together with an English-Akajeru finder list, and a comparison between Akajeru and Present-day Andamanese, an Akajeru-based variety with elements from all the other traditional dialects of North Andamanese that is today remembered by only three people.
Praise for A Grammar of Akajeru
‘Comrie and Zamponi’s work is truly excellent and curious not only for those involved in language studies of South Asia and Southeast Asia, but also for those who are more generally interested in linguistic phenomena in the world’
Bhasha. Journal of South Asian Linguistics, Philology and Grammatical Traditions
List of tables
Abbreviations and symbols
Preface
1 Introduction
2 Phonology
3 Stems
4 Words
5 Noun phrases
6 Clauses
7 Present-day Great Andamanese, Akajeru and the other traditional dialects of North Andaman
8 Word list
Appendix: Sources of examples
Notes
References
Index
DOI: 10.14324/111.9781800080935
Publication date: 11 November 2021
PDF ISBN: 9781800080935
Hardback ISBN: 9781800080959
Paperback ISBN: 9781800080942
Raoul Zamponi (Author) 
Raoul Zamponi works primarily on little-known, extinct languages and is currently a research associate at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Jena. He has previously held positions at the University of Siena and as principal investigator on a range of linguistic projects in Italy, Germany and the USA.
Bernard Comrie (Author) 
Bernard Comrie is Distinguished Faculty Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He was formerly Director of the Department of Linguistics at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig. His main interests are language universals and typology, historical linguistics, linguistic fieldwork, and languages of New Guinea, the North Caucasus, and the Andaman Islands. He is Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy and a recipient of the Academy’s Neil & Saras Smith Medal for Linguistics.
‘Comrie and Zamponi’s work is truly excellent and curious not only for those involved in language studies of South Asia and Southeast Asia, but also for those who are more generally interested in linguistic phenomena in the world’
Bhasha. Journal of South Asian Linguistics, Philology and Grammatical Traditions
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