Browsing by Author "Hundie, Mekonnen"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item The Grammar of Girirra (A Lowland East Cushitic Language of Ethiopia)(Addis Ababa University, 2015-10) Hundie, Mekonnen; Crass, Joachim(AssociateProfessor)This study examines the grammatical description and provides a descriptive discussion, analysis of the whole grammar of the Girirra. It attempts to describe the core components of linguistics such as phonology, morphology, and syntax. To carry out this study, the Basic Linguistic Theory (Dixon 2010a and b Vol. I) and I): A guide for Field Linguistics, (Payne 1997) is predominately employed as a theoretical framework. Although the data collection of the study was focused on planned elicited data, attention was also given to text data, which consists of free narratives. In other words, in addition to elicited data i.e. controlled and limited, uncontrolled and open-ended text data like animal tales, tales of men, proverbs, and riddles have been collected and used to carry out the study. Thus, the phonology, morphology, and syntax of the language have been described based on its own terms, rather than trying to impose a particular theoretical model on the target language. In light of the above background, different components of phonology such as phoneme, phonotactics, syllable, and phonological processes have been identified and discussed. Inflectional and derivational morphology of the noun and verb have been explored. Different inflectional and derivational affixes of nouns have been identified and discussed. Of these, case, number, definiteness, gender, agent noun, verbal noun, action noun, and result noun are the major ones. Seven and twelve distinct categories of subject/object pronoun and possessive pronoun have been identified and examined respectively. Different components of verb morphology such as agreement, aspect, tense and mood have been properly addressed. Negative in verb is also treated. Verb derivations including causative, passive, reciprocal and inchoative have been considered. Likewise, predicate nominal tense-less copula clause, past copula and existential copula clauses been identified and discussed. Major components of adjectives have been addressed. They are semantic types, attributive adjective, predicate adjective, reduplication, inflection, and derivation of adjectives. Similarly, under syntax phrases, clauses interrogatives and word order have been examined. In general, this study may be used as references and as points of departure for further research to enrich the existing knowledge of the Lowland East Cushitic.The study may also help to develop literacy materials for the speech community to use and maintain their language.Item Lexical Standardization in Oromo(Addis Ababa University, 2002-05) Hundie, Mekonnen; Liyew, Zelalem (PhD)This study is about the lexical standardization of Oromo. It examines the components of standardization in the light of Haugen’s (1966, 1969) proposal. This proposal classifies the process of standardization into four components: (1) selection (2) codification (3) elaboration and (4) implementation. The study begins with the identification of base dialects. The following four criteria are used to identify the base dialects in Oromo. They are: (1) written documents (2) the mass media (3) current status of the dialect and (4) attitude of speakers. The application of the above criteria helps us to propose all dialects of Oromo as base in the process of standardization. To choose the dialect base varieties as standard form some criteria are established and graded. These criteria include (1) number of speakers (2) frequency of occurrence (3) originality, (4) productivity (5) economy, (6) semantic transparency and acceptance (7) written documents (textbooks and dictionaries) (8) mass media and (9) current standardizing tendency. The above criteria are used for choosing the standard forms that can be used across dialects. Different methods of lexical elaboration are adopted (Crystal, 1997:15; Bauer, 1983: 11, 234; Mathew, 1991:37). Of these, blending, semantic extension, compounding, derivation and borrowing are mainly considered to develop the lexical adequacy of Oromo Similarly, implementation is examined in the light of different activities, and is done by organizations such as the Oromo Language Standardization Committee, the education sector, the mass media, etc., as well as by individuals.