In Srinagar Burushaski: A Descriptive and Comparative Account with Analyzed Texts Sadaf Munshi offers the structural description of a lesser-known regional variety of Burushaski spoken in Srinagar, the summer capital of the Indian-administered state of Jammu & Kashmir. The description includes a comprehensive and comparative account of the structural features of Srinagar Burushaski in terms of phonology, morphology, lexicon and syntax. The grammar is supported by an extensive digital corpus housed at the University of North Texas Digital Library. Using contemporary spoken language samples from Srinagar, Nagar, Hunza and Yasin varieties of Burushaski as well as data from the available literature, Munshi provides a thorough understanding of the historical development of Srinagar Burushaski, complementing the existing studies on Burushaski dialectology.
Sadaf Munshi, Ph.D. (2006, University of Texas at Austin), is a professor of Linguistics at the University of North Texas (UNT). Her publications include articles in peer-reviewed journals and a digital corpus on Burushaski housed at the UNT Digital Library.
List of Tables, Figures and Maps Representation of Sounds Symbols and Abbreviations Maps
1 Introduction
â1.1âBackground
â1.2âEmergence of Srinagar Burushaski
â1.3âDatabase and Methodology
â1.4âTranscription Key
â1.5âOrganization of the Book
3 Morpho-Syntax
â3.1âConstituent Order Typology
â3.2âGrammatical Relations, Case, and Agreement
â3.3âQuestion Formation
â3.4âClause Combination
â3.5âNon-Finite Clausal Constructions
4 Nominals and Nominal Inflection
â4.1âNouns and Noun Classes
â4.2âNumber
â4.3âCase
â4.4âPersonal Pronouns
â4.5âPossessability of Nouns
â4.6âModifiers
5 Verb Morphology
â5.1âMorphology of the Verb Component
â5.2âMorphology of the Verb âBeâ
â5.3âD-Prefix Verbs
â5.4âCausative Verbs
â5.5âNegation
â5.6âImperatives and Prohibitives
â5.7âParticipial Forms
â5.8âOptatives
â5.9âPresumptive, Potential, and Dubitative Moods