Difference between revisions of "User:Allen Asiimwe"
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My name is Allen Asiimwe. | My name is Allen Asiimwe. | ||
− | I am a | + | I am a Ugandan and I live in Stellenbosch-South Africa at the moment. |
− | I work at Makerere University in the | + | I work at Makerere University in the department of African Languages as an Assistant Lecturer. |
I hold a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Postgraduate Diploma in Education both from Makerere University, Kampala Uganda. I also hold a Master of Philosophy (Linguistics) from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. | I hold a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Postgraduate Diploma in Education both from Makerere University, Kampala Uganda. I also hold a Master of Philosophy (Linguistics) from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. | ||
− | I | + | At Makerere I teach Runyakitara. Runyakitara is the name given to the four closely related languages, namely Runyankore, Rukiga, Runyoro, and Rutooro, spoken in the south-western part of Uganda. Since the lexical similarity between Runyankore and Rukiga is very high, they are normally referred to as Runyakore-Rukiga, that is, as one language and the same is true for Runyoro and Rutooro. My dialect is Rukiga and all my research so far is on Runyankore-Rukiga. |
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+ | ===== Allen Asiimwe (2007) Morpho-syntactic Patterns in Runyankore-Rukiga ===== | ||
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+ | My Master's degree thesis is of a descriptive nature. The main purpose was to document important grammatical constructions in Runyankore-Rukiga. The introductory chapter describes the nominal and verbal morphology of Runyakore-Rukiga. I then investigate Locative Marking and compare Locative-Inversion across several Bantu languages with Locative Inversion in RR. To the best of my knowledge no one has ever done comprehensive research on locative marking including Runyankore-Rukiga. There is also a chapter on the grammatical functions of the Initial Vowel in Runyakore-Rukiga, an interesting yet neglected area that impacts on almost all parts of grammar of a Bantu language. All the illustrations in Runyankore-Rukiga used in my thesis were glossed using Typecraft. | ||
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+ | Together with Dorothee Beermann, I have continued to investigate locative marking in Runyankore-Rukiga. We are currently looking at the morpho-syntax of locative expressions in Runyankore-Rukiga, focusing mainly on the multi-functional nature of the locative classes. | ||
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+ | I am committed to doing more research on my mother tongue. I would like to see it develop. | ||
− | + | My latest squib on TypeCraft is: [[A_comparative_analysis_of_Runyankore-Rukiga_and_Luganda_pronominal_agreement]]. It is still under construction. | |
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− | I | + | I hold a PhD in African Languages from Stellenbosch South Africa (I graduated in 2014). The title of my PhD dissertation is : Definiteness and Specificity in Runyankore-Rukiga (https://scholar.sun.ac.za/bitstream/handle/10019.1/.../asiimwe_definiteness_2014.pdf). In my research, I explored the properties of the preprefix (initial vowel) in relation to definiteness and specificity marking in Runyankore-Rukiga. Apart from the preprefix, other morpho-syntactic parameters that are active in marking definiteness and specificity were also examined. One of the questions that were explored is whether the preprefix plays the role of a definite article. |
Latest revision as of 05:43, 14 November 2017
My name is Allen Asiimwe. I am a Ugandan and I live in Stellenbosch-South Africa at the moment. I work at Makerere University in the department of African Languages as an Assistant Lecturer. I hold a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Postgraduate Diploma in Education both from Makerere University, Kampala Uganda. I also hold a Master of Philosophy (Linguistics) from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. At Makerere I teach Runyakitara. Runyakitara is the name given to the four closely related languages, namely Runyankore, Rukiga, Runyoro, and Rutooro, spoken in the south-western part of Uganda. Since the lexical similarity between Runyankore and Rukiga is very high, they are normally referred to as Runyakore-Rukiga, that is, as one language and the same is true for Runyoro and Rutooro. My dialect is Rukiga and all my research so far is on Runyankore-Rukiga.
Allen Asiimwe (2007) Morpho-syntactic Patterns in Runyankore-Rukiga
My Master's degree thesis is of a descriptive nature. The main purpose was to document important grammatical constructions in Runyankore-Rukiga. The introductory chapter describes the nominal and verbal morphology of Runyakore-Rukiga. I then investigate Locative Marking and compare Locative-Inversion across several Bantu languages with Locative Inversion in RR. To the best of my knowledge no one has ever done comprehensive research on locative marking including Runyankore-Rukiga. There is also a chapter on the grammatical functions of the Initial Vowel in Runyakore-Rukiga, an interesting yet neglected area that impacts on almost all parts of grammar of a Bantu language. All the illustrations in Runyankore-Rukiga used in my thesis were glossed using Typecraft.
Together with Dorothee Beermann, I have continued to investigate locative marking in Runyankore-Rukiga. We are currently looking at the morpho-syntax of locative expressions in Runyankore-Rukiga, focusing mainly on the multi-functional nature of the locative classes.
I am committed to doing more research on my mother tongue. I would like to see it develop.
My latest squib on TypeCraft is: A_comparative_analysis_of_Runyankore-Rukiga_and_Luganda_pronominal_agreement. It is still under construction.
I hold a PhD in African Languages from Stellenbosch South Africa (I graduated in 2014). The title of my PhD dissertation is : Definiteness and Specificity in Runyankore-Rukiga (https://scholar.sun.ac.za/bitstream/handle/10019.1/.../asiimwe_definiteness_2014.pdf). In my research, I explored the properties of the preprefix (initial vowel) in relation to definiteness and specificity marking in Runyankore-Rukiga. Apart from the preprefix, other morpho-syntactic parameters that are active in marking definiteness and specificity were also examined. One of the questions that were explored is whether the preprefix plays the role of a definite article.