OLAC Record oai:scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu:10125/107818 |
Metadata | ||
Title: | Elicitation of adjectives | |
Bibliographic Citation: | Misech, Ikelau, Adamson, Nathan, Esquivel, Orlyn Joyce, McDonnell, Bradley; 2023-09-21; We elicited words from the Swadesh list, starting with "small" and ending with "thin." During the session, Ikelau contributed additional lexical items, particularly those associated with plural adjectives, comparative forms, and emphatic expressions. She also provided basic sentence examples, aligning them with the words on the Swadish list. [00:01:06] We started eliciting the adjective word #153 (which is “big”) from the Swadesh list. [00:01:40] We started eliciting the superlative and comparative forms of the word #152 from the Swadesh list. [00:05:29] We elicited simple sentences for the adjective word #152, which can also be used to convey “age” in a comparative sentence. [00:10:30] We started eliciting the adjective word #154 (which is “short”) from the Swadesh list. [00:12:20] There might be a partial reduplication when using the word. [00:12:29] The language expert gave some sample of simple sentences for the adjective word #154. [00:20:09] The language expert gave some sample of comparative sentences for the adjective word #154. [00:24:25] We started eliciting the adjective word #155 (which is “long”) from the Swadesh list. This word can be used for non-human forms, e.g., the sleeve of a shirt or the length of a tree. [00:35:09] We continued to elicit sentences using the adjective words and attempted to construct our own based on the information provided by the language expert. Further, we sought confirmation from her regarding the accuracy of those sentences. [00:38:59] We elicited the adjective word #156 (which is “thin”) from the Swadesh list. [00:42:36] The language expert provided additional words that also mean “thin.” [00:49:40] We asked the language expert about the plural forms of the adjectives, alongside how they are used in a simple sentence.; digital video H.264 mp4 file, digital pdf file document; Kaipuleohone University of Hawai'i Digital Language Archive;https://hdl.handle.net/10125/107818. | |
Contributor (depositor): | McDonnell, Bradley | |
Contributor (researcher): | Adamson, Nathan | |
Esquivel, Orlyn Joyce | ||
Contributor (speaker): | Misech, Ikelau | |
Coverage (ISO3166): | PW | |
Date (W3CDTF): | 2023-09-21 | |
Description: | We elicited words from the Swadesh list, starting with "small" and ending with "thin." During the session, Ikelau contributed additional lexical items, particularly those associated with plural adjectives, comparative forms, and emphatic expressions. She also provided basic sentence examples, aligning them with the words on the Swadish list. [00:01:06] We started eliciting the adjective word #153 (which is “big”) from the Swadesh list. [00:01:40] We started eliciting the superlative and comparative forms of the word #152 from the Swadesh list. [00:05:29] We elicited simple sentences for the adjective word #152, which can also be used to convey “age” in a comparative sentence. [00:10:30] We started eliciting the adjective word #154 (which is “short”) from the Swadesh list. [00:12:20] There might be a partial reduplication when using the word. [00:12:29] The language expert gave some sample of simple sentences for the adjective word #154. [00:20:09] The language expert gave some sample of comparative sentences for the adjective word #154. [00:24:25] We started eliciting the adjective word #155 (which is “long”) from the Swadesh list. This word can be used for non-human forms, e.g., the sleeve of a shirt or the length of a tree. [00:35:09] We continued to elicit sentences using the adjective words and attempted to construct our own based on the information provided by the language expert. Further, we sought confirmation from her regarding the accuracy of those sentences. [00:38:59] We elicited the adjective word #156 (which is “thin”) from the Swadesh list. [00:42:36] The language expert provided additional words that also mean “thin.” [00:49:40] We asked the language expert about the plural forms of the adjectives, alongside how they are used in a simple sentence. | |
Region: Palau; recording made in Honolulu, HI, USA | ||
Format: | digital video H.264 mp4 file | |
digital pdf file document | ||
00:56:21 | ||
Identifier: | FM8-010 | |
Identifier (URI): | https://hdl.handle.net/10125/107818 | |
Language: | Palauan | |
Language (ISO639): | pau | |
Subject: | Palauan language | |
Subject (ISO639): | pau | |
Table Of Contents: | FM8-010.mp4 | |
FM8-010.pdf | ||
Type (DCMI): | MovingImage | |
Text | ||
Type (OLAC): | primary_text | |
OLAC Info |
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Archive: | Kaipuleohone | |
Description: | http://www.language-archives.org/archive/scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu | |
GetRecord: | OAI-PMH request for OLAC format | |
GetRecord: | Pre-generated XML file | |
OAI Info |
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OaiIdentifier: | oai:scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu:10125/107818 | |
DateStamp: | 2024-08-06 | |
GetRecord: | OAI-PMH request for simple DC format | |
Search Info | ||
Citation: | Misech, Ikelau (speaker); Adamson, Nathan (researcher); Esquivel, Orlyn Joyce (researcher); McDonnell, Bradley (depositor). 2023. Kaipuleohone. | |
Terms: | area_Pacific country_PW dcmi_MovingImage dcmi_Text iso639_pau olac_primary_text | |
Inferred Metadata | ||
Country: | Palau | |
Area: | Pacific |