{"pk":35211,"title":"Possessive prefixes in Proto-Kusunda","subtitle":null,"abstract":"Three varieties of Kusunda, a moribund language isolate of Nepal, have been recorded in existing literature; in Hodgson (1857), in Reinhard &amp; Toba (1970), and in several recent publications analyzing material elicited from the language’s last two fluent speakers, Gyani Maiya Sen and Kamala Khatri. Each of these varieties exhibits a set of unique phonological and morphological innovations from their latest common ancestor, Proto-Kusunda (PK). This paper seeks to reconstruct the prefixing possessive marking system of PK, using morphological evidence from the 3 attested varieties. Proto-Kusunda is found to have exhibited obligatory possessive marking on a set of inalienably possessed nouns. Possessed nouns were marked with 2 sets of preposed affixes: *t- *n- *g-, which indexed the person of the noun’s possessor, and *-i- *-a- *-u- *-ja-, a set of derivational prefixes which categorized possessed nominals into a number of semantic fields. The formal and functional characteristics of this system are strongly reminiscent of an analogous system of head-marking possession found in the Great Andamanese language family of India, prompting questions of possible areal influence or genetic inheritance in the remote past.","language":"en","license":null,"keywords":[{"word":"Kusunda"},{"word":"Possessive Prefixes"},{"word":"Lexicalization"},{"word":"Somatic affixes"},{"word":"Great Andamanese"}],"section":"Articles","is_remote":true,"remote_url":"https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7r58b159","frozenauthors":[{"first_name":"Augie","middle_name":"","last_name":"Spendley","name_suffix":"","institution":"University of Edinburgh","department":"None"}],"date_submitted":"2023-05-24T06:50:52+10:00","date_accepted":"2023-05-24T06:50:52+10:00","date_published":"2024-07-15T17:00:00+10:00","render_galley":null,"galleys":[{"label":"","type":"pdf","path":"https://journalpub.escholarship.org/himalayanlinguistics/article/35211/galley/26204/download/"}]}