Abstract

The paper gives an account of pronouns in Lotha, a Tibeto-Burman language spoken in Nagaland, India. Lotha is a generic name and refers to both the linguistic group and the ethno-cultural entity. Lothas are racially Mongoloid and linguistically, it has been classified under the Central Naga group of the Naga sub-branch of the Tibeto-Burman languages. Pronouns in Lotha are free forms which can function solely to fill the position of a noun phrase in a clause. Personal pronouns are typically deixis to the speech participants for each of the three grammatical person i.e. first person, second person and third person. In annex to person, numbers i.e. singular, dual and plural are also distinguished on pronouns. Personal pronouns in Lotha are independent and free-standing and for that matter it takes case-markers and postposition in similar ways as full noun phrase. The first, second and third personal pronouns take case marking only when it serves as a subject and does not take any case markers when it serves as an object. Demonstrative pronouns function in several ways based on proximity and distance in time. Lotha has three-way distinction of identifying demonstrative pronoun i.e. proximate, distance and remote marked by ʃi ‘this’ (near the speaker), ci ‘that’(near the hearer) and o-ci ‘over there’( far away from both the speaker and hearer). The interrogative pronouns kvə, ndo and otʃɔ are attached to the bound nominal suffixes. Indefinite pronouns can be formed from the question words which can change to affirmative by attaching the indefinite suffix -sana and its negative particle counterpart mek. Reflexive pronoun in Lotha is expressed by the reflexive lexeme bɔbɔ ‘self’ which is a free morpheme.

Highlights

  • Lotha is a generic name and refers to both the linguistic group and the ethno-cultural entity

  • Pronouns in Lotha are free forms which can function solely to fill the position of a noun phrase in a clause

  • Personal pronouns are typically deixis to the speech participants for each of the three grammatical person i.e. first person, second person and third person

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lotha is a generic name and refers to both the linguistic group and the ethno-cultural entity. Lotha has been classified under the Central Naga group of the Naga sub-branch of the Tibeto-Burman languages (Eberhard et al, 2020). Lotha is one of the major languages spoken in Nagaland. The speakers of Lotha are scattered all over Nagaland but the majority are concentrated mainly at Wokha district of Nagaland. According to the Census of India (2011), the total number of Lotha speakers is 1, 66,343. Lewis et al (2015) list a total number of 1, 66,000 Lotha speakers. Lotha has a number of varieties but, the variation is mainly at the phonological level, that is, the accent of the speaker, which varies from village to village. This paper is a research done on the standard variety of the Lotha language spoken in and around wokha town

Methodology
Pronouns in Lotha
Personal pronouns
Possessive Pronouns
Demonstrative pronouns
Interrogative Pronouns
Indefinite pronouns
Reflexive Pronouns
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call