LANGUAGE IN INDIA

Strength for Today and Bright Hope for Tomorrow

Volume 12 : 5 May 2012
ISSN 1930-2940

Managing Editor: M. S. Thirumalai, Ph.D.
Editors: B. Mallikarjun, Ph.D.
         Sam Mohanlal, Ph.D.
         B. A. Sharada, Ph.D.
         A. R. Fatihi, Ph.D.
         Lakhan Gusain, Ph.D.
         Jennifer Marie Bayer, Ph.D.
         S. M. Ravichandran, Ph.D.
         G. Baskaran, Ph.D.
         L. Ramamoorthy, Ph.D.
Assistant Managing Editor: Swarna Thirumalai, M.A.


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RELATIVES IN JAPANESE AND QUECHUA

George Bedell, Ph.D.


A preliminary version of this paper was presented to the 6th International Conference on Missionary Linguistics, hosted by Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, March 2010.

Relative clauses. In recent years, relative clauses have come to be thought of as a type of subordinate clause which is located within a noun phrase and semantically restricts the reference of that noun phrase. For more detail on the notion of 'relative clause' in a typological context, see Keenan (1985).

This is only the beginning part of the article. PLEASE CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE IN PRINTER-FRIENDLY VERSION.


George Bedell, Ph.D.
Lecturer, Department of Linguistics
Payap University
Chiang Mai 50000
Thailand
gdbedell@gmail.com

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