Abstract

Studies that are available on Ìgás̩í have only classified the speech form as one of the speech forms under the Ako̩ko̩id language cluster but none has examined tense, aspect and negation in the speech form. The present study provides a descriptive account of tense, aspect and negation in the speech form. It maintains that tense in Ìgáṣí polarises future and non-future. It establishes, among other things, that the speech form uses the pre-verbal particle á to mark its future tense and demonstrates that aspects in the speech form are divided into perfect and imperfect. The study also claims that Ìgáṣí has three basic negative morphemes which are kpa, sẹ and àgẹ̀ and shows that the future tense, perfect and habitual aspects have overt morphemes that reflect their presence in negative sentences. It is further claimed that àgẹ̀ which is divisible into nominal prefix (à) and negator (gè̩) functions as the lexical negator in the speech form. Data in this study were obtained from native speakers of Ìgás̩í through oral interviews and their responses were recorded. It is hoped that this study, throws more light on the relationship among the functional categories (tense, aspect and negation) in Ìgás̩í speech form and document its syntax for posterity as nothing has been in that category.

Highlights

  • Functional categories are words without idiosyncratic descriptive content or properties; they primarily serve as information carriers coded in the grammatical properties of expression within the sentence Radford (1997)

  • We have examined the structure of tense, aspect and negation in Ìgáṣí

  • It is shown in the paper that tense in Ìgáṣí polarises future and non-future tense

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Summary

Introduction

Functional categories are words without idiosyncratic descriptive content or properties; they primarily serve as information carriers coded in the grammatical properties of expression within the sentence Radford (1997). Functional categories belong to the closed class of words as a result, new entries either through lexical borrowing or morphological derivations are not allowed into their class Ilori (2010) Scholars such as Awoyale (1995) have identified the following as functional categories in languages: preposition, determiner, conjunction, complementizer, tense, aspect, modal, agreement markers, negators, focus markers andgenitive markers. Olaogun (2016) proposes Njo-Koo language for a group of mutually intelligible speech forms formally known as Amgbe/Arigidi cluster spoken in six towns (Òkè-àgbè, Ìgáṣí, Àjọwá, Arigidi and Erúṣú) in the Northwest of Àkókó in Oǹdó State. No work exists or has been published on tense and aspect in Ìgáṣí This present paper is an effort to fill this gap and it is prompted by Crystal’s (2000) clarion call that linguists should explore endangered languages for the purpose of documentation before the languages go into extinction. The section will dedicated to the examination of how tense relates the time of an action, event and states of affairs in Ìgáṣí

Past tense in Ìgáṣí
Future tense
Aspect
Progressive aspect in Ìgáṣí
Habitual Aspect
Perfect aspect
The relationship between tense and aspect in Ìgáṣí
Co-occurrence of aspects in Ìgáṣí
Co-occurrences of Tense and Aspect in Ìgáṣí
Negation
Focus Negation
Object NP Negation
Verb Negation
Conclusion
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