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THE SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS OF MOOD IN GOKANA
ABSTRACT
Every natural
language provides a systematic structure for the expression of the truth value
of the speakers’ assertion within discourse structure. This paper described the
syntax and semantics of mood within a formal linguistic framework. The study
found that two types of mood: the imperative and the indicative are attested in
Gokana. The imperative mood is expressed in the form of commands and requests,
while the indicative occur as an unmarked mood in the language. The paper
showed that the imperative mood in Gokana can be overtly or covertly marked in
surface syntax depending on the number features of the subject. The study
reported that request structures are distinguished from commands in the
language by the insertion of the politeness markers sóosóo or zẹẹ in sentence-initial
position of the construction. And noted that for a greater degree of
politeness, these markers can co-occur as sóosóo
zẹẹ but the linear
sequence of the markers cannot be inverted. The study re-analyzed what Wolff
(1964) identified as the aorist tense in Gokana as the simple form of the
indicative mood as time contrasts are not grammaticalized in the simple
indicative mood.
KEYWORDS: Gokana, Mood, Syntax,
Imperative, Indicative, Modality, Grammatical Structure
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