4 langues concernées
23 titres trouvés
[26526] Meyer, Ronny , Yvonne Treis & Azeb Amha (Eds.) (2014) : Explorations in ethiopian linguistics : complex predicates, finiteness and interrogativity
[24883] Mietzner, Angelika & Yvonne Treis (Eds) (2008) : Encoding Motion. Case Studies from Africa
[19904] Treis, Yvonne (1998) : Names of Khoisan languages and their variants
[19905] Treis, Yvonne (2000) : Komplexe sätze im Kxoe (Namibia)
[19906] Treis, Yvonne (2000) : NP coordination in Kxoe (Central Khoisan)
[24057] Treis, Yvonne (2008) : A Grammar of Kambaata. Part I: Phonology, Nominal Morphology, and Non-verbal Predication
[24800] Treis, Yvonne (2005) : Kambaata Kinship terminology
[24818] Treis, Yvonne (2007) : Motion events in Kambaata
[24832] Treis, Yvonne (2005) : Avoiding their names, avoiding their eyes: how Kambaata women respect their in-laws
[24833] Treis, Yvonne (2006) : Form and function of case marking in Kambaata
[24834] Treis, Yvonne (2007) : Copulas in Kambaata
[24835] Treis, Yvonne (2008) : Relativization in Kambaata (Cushitic)
[25728] Treis, Yvonne (2010) : Perception Verbs and Taste Adjectives in Kambaata and Beyond
[26091] Treis, Yvonne (2011) : Expressing Future Time Reference in Kambaata
[26324] Treis, Yvonne (2012) : Categorial hybrids in Kambaata
[26528] Treis, Yvonne (2014) : Interrogativity in Baskeet
[26793] Treis, Yvonne (2014) : Number in Kambaata
[27279] Treis, Yvonne (2011) : Polysemous agent nominals in Kambaata (Cushitic)
[27696] Treis, Yvonne (2012) : Kambaata children’s songs and word games: Or what can we learn about the grammar of Kambaata by analysing marginal literature genres?
[28012] Treis, Yvonne (2017) : “They are only two, like the teats of a donkey” – Kambataa denumerals revisited
[28112] Treis, Yvonne (2019) : Similative and equative demonstratives in Kambaata
[27086] Treis, Yvonne & Alexander Werth (2014) : Notes from the Field: Baskeet Phonological Sketch and Digital Wordlist.
[27892] Treis, Yvonne & Deginet Wotango Doyiso (2019) : “Issues and maize bread taste good when they're cool”: Temperature terms and their metaphorical extensions in Kambaata (Cushitic)