Revista Española de Lingüística — 2006 — Vol. 35.2 — p. 551-579 — ISSN: 0210-1874. El burušaski [B], pronúnciese [burúšaski], se habla actualmente en los abruptos valles de los ríos Yasin y Hunza, al norte de la región pakistaní de Gilgit. Durante mucho tiempo se ha considerado una lengua aislada, es decir, sin parentesco genético reconocido, situándose por lo tanto al mismo...
2009. — 440 p.
This 440-page volume contains papers and articles on Burushaski morphology, verb agreement, review on issues related to Proto-Yeniseian language and its relation to Burushaski, a 100-page narration on Hunza sociology, a study on pairwise comparisons to Burushaski, and a complete chapter on graffiti and petroglyphs found in Northern Pakistan.
Of course, we talk...
Not known, 1998. — 19 p.
Burushaski (stress on the second syllable) is spoken by some fifty thousand people in northern Pakistan, the Hunzakuts, who live in the valleys of the Hunza and Yasin rivers (north of Gilgit) where these cut through the Karakoram Range [lit.ref. 5]. The language is not obviously related to any of the surrounding languages: the Indic languages of...
University of North Texas, 2008. Burushaski is a language isolate (despite fringe claims!) spoken by the Burusho people in northern Pakistan of which Hunza is a dialect. This work presents a sketch of the grammar of the language, including morphosyntax, phonology, and morphology , and also gives a very brief overview of some dialectal variation at the end. Burushaski is generally...
Опубликована в Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies Vol. 3, No. 3 (2011). This paper introduces the concept of Light Verbs and Noun Verb Agreement in Hunza Burushaski from a native speaker’s perspective by a student of linguistics in preparation for a future detailed study on the complex verb predicates and the general interaction of various types of verbs with six noun...
Work Papers of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, Volume 40, 1996. — 72 p.
Burushaski verb agreement and case marking phenomena are complex and have notbeen described adequately by any current theory of syntax. In particular, no explanationhas yet been given as to why a variety of nominals can trigger agreement in the verbalprefix. In some cases the apparent subject triggers...
Опубликована в Journal of Indo-European studies, Vol. 40, Issue 1-2, (2012), p.59-153.
The Burushaski personal and demonstrative pronominal system is correlated in its entirety with Indo-European. This close correlation, together with the extensive grammatical correspondences in the nominal and verbal systems (given as an addendum), advances significantly the hypothesis of the...
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