Humaniora
Vol 25, No 3 (2013)

SUBJECT-VERB AGREEMENT AND ASPECT IN MUNA LANGUAGE

La Ode Nggawu (Faculty of Teacher Training and Education, Haluoleo University, Kendari)



Article Info

Publish Date
25 Oct 2013

Abstract

The article examines subject-verb agreement and aspect in Muna language. The data of this study were collected through observation and note-taking and analyzed syntactically. The results of the study show that (1) Muna language has subject markers attached to predicates; (2) the subject markers are (a) /a/, /ae/, /ao/ (for subject ‘I’), (b) /da/, /dae/, /dao/ (for subject ’we’ for 2 persons), (c) /da- -mu/, /dae- -mu/, /dao- mu/ (for subject ‘we’ for more than 2 persons), (d) /o/, /ome/, /omo/ (for subject ‘you’ singular), (e) /o- -mu/, /ome- -mu/, /omo- mu/ (for subject ‘you’ plural), (f) /no/, /ne/ (subject ‘she/he’), and (g) /do/, /de/ (for subject ‘they’); (3) variation for each subject marker is influenced by predicate types such as transitive, intransitive, or adjective; (4) Muna language uses infix /-um-/ to express the event in the future, nando to express a progressive event, and suffix /mo-/ or lexical padamo to express the event in the past; (5) Muna language differentiates the concept of aspect in negative sentences from that in positive sentences; it uses miina ‘not’ to express a negative statement in the past, and the prefix /pa:/ to express a negative statement in the future; and (6) Muna language has aspect markers.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

jurnal-humaniora

Publisher

Subject

Humanities

Description

Humaniora focuses on the publication of articles that transcend disciplines and appeal to a diverse readership, advancing the study of Indonesian humanities, and specifically Indonesian or Indonesia-related culture. These are articles that strengthen critical approaches, increase the quality of ...