Athapaskan languages comprise one of the largest, most geographically distributed, and most culturally diverse families in North America. Nevertheless, each daughter language features a set of classificatory verb stems which, semantically, focus less on signaling a relational predication than on some physical attribute of a prominent relational participant. Consequently, most consumption expressions focus on the marking of the theme; that is, on the type of object consumed, the manner in which the consumption happens, or the extent of the dissipation of the object through a combination of classificatory verb stems and adverbial prefixes. Unlike what is found in many languages, there is no appreciable focus on the agent/consumer or on the benefits or detriments associated with the acts of eating or drinking.
2024. Processing manner under high cognitive pressure: Evidence from French–English and English–French simultaneous interpreting. Language and Cognition 16:4 ► pp. 1105 ff.
Wu, Tana
2023. Metaphors and culturally unique idioms of eating and drinking in Mongolian. Language and Cognition 15:1 ► pp. 173 ff.
Akumbu, Pius W. & Roland Kießling
2021. Literal and metaphorical usages of Babanki EAT and DRINK verbs. Afrika und Übersee 94 ► pp. 1 ff.
Al-Bataineh, Hussein
2021. Alternations of classificatory verb stems in Tłı̨chǫ Yatıì: a cognitive semantic account. Folia Linguistica 55:1 ► pp. 163 ff.
Al-Bataineh, Hussein
2021. Alternations of classificatory verb stems in Tłı̨chǫ Yatıì: a cognitive semantic account. Folia Linguistica 55:1 ► pp. 163 ff.
Spence, Justin
2016. Lexical Innovation And Variation In Hupa (Athabaskan). International Journal of American Linguistics 82:1 ► pp. 71 ff.
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