Adjectives and qualitative verbs in Akebu
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Akebu (< Kebu-Animere < Left Bank < Kwa < Niger-Congo) has a closed class of adjectives
which consists of about 30 lexemes, most of which are lexically reduplicated. Adjectives can
be used both as modifiers and as copula’s complements. Adjectives in Akebu have cross-linguistically
rare morphosyntactic features. Firstly, when an adjective modifies the head noun
in an NP it is incorporated between the noun stem and the suffixal noun class marker. Secondly, the copula used with adjectives differs from the one occurring with nouns and locative
prepositional phrases in predicative position. Most adjectives are nominalized by conversion,
but some adjectives derive nouns by full reduplication. In Akebu, a large number of lexemes
with prototypically adjectival meanings are qualitative verbs. There is no evident semantic distribution
between adjectives and verbs. At the same time, verbs share some morphosyntactic
properties with true adjectives: like adjectives, they are incorporated between the noun stem
and the suffixal noun class markers when used as nominal modifiers; like adjectives, they can
be nominalized by means of reduplication. The resulting noun designates the subject of the action/
state if the verb is intransitive and the object if the verb is transitive. These nouns can occur
in periphrastic superlative constructions similarly to nouns derived from true adjectives.
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Makeeva N. V. Adjectives and qualitative verbs in Akebu. Vestnik SPbSU. Asian and African Studies, 2018, vol. 10, issue 1, pp. 14–31.