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Syntactic valency and contextual specialization: the case of -shika in Swahili1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

In Johnson's Standard Swahili-English dictionary (1939) the meaning of the verb-Shika is described as follows:

hold fast, take hold of, keep hold on, seize, grasp, keep. A common word with a wide range of application, e.g. (1) get hold on, press hard on, be on the mind, put in difficulties; (2) keep a hold on, persevere in; (3) hold to, keep to, observe, remember, attend to, obey; (4) determine, resolve, make up the mind to; (5) also as Intrans. have a hold, prevail, be urgent.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 1986

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References

REFERENCES

Lyndon, Harris. 1970. ‘The phrasal predicate in Swahili', Afican Language Studies, XI, 191210.Google Scholar
Whiteley, W. H. and Omar, Y.. 1974. ‘Contextual specialization and idiomaticity: a case study from Swahili', African Language Studies, XV, 1–14.Google Scholar