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The adjective == == == == ‘small’ is attested. This could be considered a case <strong>of</strong><br />

reduplication, but since it is always realized as bisyllabic, it cannot lend support to a CV<br />

word pattern for adjectives.<br />

There are a large percentage <strong>of</strong> adjectives which are <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> V1CV1 shape:<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

(10) Sample V1CV1 adjectives in Mono<br />

(F (F (F (F ~ (F (F (F (F ~ (F (F (F (F ‘tart’<br />

~ <br />

‘heavy’ (Kam<strong>and</strong>a 1998: 671)<br />

>K >K >K >K ~ >K >K >K >K ~ K>K K>K ‘black’<br />

(FA( (FA( (FA( (FA( ~<br />

—<br />

A(FA( A(FA( A(FA( A(FA( ‘bad’<br />

@ @ @ @ ~ @ @ @ @ ‘short’<br />

=(@=( =(@=( =(@=( =(@=(<br />

‘true’<br />

=(J5( =(J5( =(J5( =(J5( ~ (J5( (J5( (J5( (J5( ‘good’<br />

Many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se derive from <strong>the</strong> same base as a verbal form. For example, KBK<br />

KBK<br />

‘smelly’ <strong>and</strong> (BK (BK<br />

(BK (BK ‘to be smelly, to rot’ come from <strong>the</strong> same root /BK BK BK/. BK This phenomenon<br />

will be discussed in detail in Section 7.1.1.<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r nouns. Kinship terms, body parts, <strong>and</strong> plant <strong>and</strong> animal names are<br />

subcategories <strong>of</strong> nouns which <strong>of</strong>ten exhibit novel phonological behavior. With respect to<br />

word shapes, <strong>the</strong> only group which appears to have unique behavior are <strong>the</strong> kinship<br />

terms. While all <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> word shapes in (1) above are attested for kinship terms, well over<br />

half <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> kinship terms begin with a vowel, most with <strong>the</strong> vowel a. Despite this, only<br />

three kinship terms, =(=( =(=( =(=( =(=( ‘bro<strong>the</strong>r’, C C C C ‘younger sibling’, <strong>and</strong> (C>( (C>( (C>( (C>( ‘older sibling’ exhibit<br />

a V1CV1 word pattern, statistically much less than found amongst o<strong>the</strong>r Mono nouns.<br />

Pronouns. Strictly speaking, pronouns are not a subcategory <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> major<br />

grammatical category <strong>of</strong> nouns. Ra<strong>the</strong>r, <strong>the</strong>y are usually considered to be a type <strong>of</strong><br />

grammatical function word. However, pronouns in Mono exhibit similarities in behavior<br />

to nouns with respect to word shapes, <strong>and</strong> so <strong>the</strong>y will be discussed here.<br />

Table 6.1 shows <strong>the</strong> forms <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> pronouns in citation form, in subject position <strong>of</strong><br />

a clause, in object position in a clause, <strong>and</strong> in an associative noun phrase:<br />

84

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