This volume consists of 30 selected papers presented to the IInd International Conference on South Asian Languages and Linguistics held during January 9-11, 1980, hosted by the Department of Linguistics, Osmania University, Hyderabad, India. The papers cover a wide range of topics in South Asian Linguistics: phonetics, phonology, language variation, Panini, semantics, typology, etc. A special feature of the volume is a collection of essays which focus on two important aspects of South Asian Linguistics, viz. 'Convergence' and 'Diglossia' which should be of interest to all students of Linguistics all over the world.
Most of the contributors of these papers are established scholars in South Asian Linguistics with international renown.
About the Author:
Bh. Krishnamurti is Professor of Linguistics at Osmania University, Hyderabad. He received a B.A. (Hons) degree (1948) in Telugu language and literatue from Andhra Univerisity, Waltari, and A.M. (1955) and Ph.D. (1957) in Linguistics from the University of Pennsylvania. His publications include: Telugu verbal bases: A comparative and descriptive study, UCPL24 (Berkeley & Los Angeles, 1961); A Telugu dialect dictionary of occupational vocabularies, Vol. I (Agriculture 1962), Vol. II (Handloom 1972), Andhra Pradesh Sahitya Akademi (Hyderabad); Konda or Kubi: A Dravidian language (Hyderabad, 1969), A grammar of modern Telugu (coauthored with J.P.L. Gwynn), Oxford India (New Delhi, 1985).
Colin P. Masica has a Ph.D from the University of Chicago and is Professor in the Department of South Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago. His major work is Defining a linguistic area: South Asia, the University of Chicago Press (Chicago, 1976).
Anjani K. Sinha is a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and is Reader in the Department of Linguistics, Delhi Univeristy.
Preface Comments on 'Convergence' (Part II) By COLIN P. MASICA Comments on 'Diglossia' (Part III) By BH. KRISHNAMURTI
HANS HENRICH HOCK    "P-Oriented" constructions in Sanskrit
KASHI WALI    Case of causee
K. S. YADURAJAN    Subjacency: Counter-evidence from Kannada
H. S. ANANTHANARAYANA    Treatment of homonymy in Panini's Astadhyayi
GEORGE CARDONA    Phonology and phonetics in ancient Indian works: The case of voiced and voiceless elements
MANJARI OHALA    A search for the phonetic correlates of Hindi stress
A. USHA DEVI    On Certain phonological process in South Dravidian II
RAMAVATAR YADAV    Acoustic correlates of word stress in Maithili
WILLIAM BRIGHT    Archaelogy, linguistics and Ancient Dravidian
IRAVATHAM MAHADEVAN    Study of the Indus script: A bilingual approach
J. W. GAIR    Sinhala focused sentences: Naturalization of a calque
YAMUNA KACHRU    The syntax of Dakkhini: A study in language variation and language change
W. KANITTANAN    Kamti Tai: From an SVO to an SOV language
M. H. KLAIMAN    Semantic parameters and the South Asian linguistic area
B. LAKSHMI BAI    A note on syntactic convergence among Indian languages: The verb "to be"
K. MEENAKSHI    The quotative in Indo-Aryan
RAJESHWARI PANDHARIPANDE    Language and language variation: Nagpuri Marathi
B. N. PATNAIK AND IRA PANDIT    Englishization of Oriya
U. N. SINGH, K.V. SUBBARAO AND S.K. BANDYOPADHYAY    Classification of polar verbs in selected South-Asian languages
SANFORD B. STEEVER    Morphological convergence in the Khondmals : (Pro)nominal incorporation
M.W. SUGATHAPALA DE SILVA    Sanskrit grammarians on diglossia
J. W. GAIR    Sinhala diglossia revisited or diglossia dies hard
B. C. JOHNSON    Diglossia in Africa
R. F. MOAG    Diglossia versus bidialectalism: Hindi in Fiji and in Eastern Uttar Pradesh
H. SCHIFFMAN AND S. AROKIANATHAN    Diglossic variation in Tamil film and fiction
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