The 2nd Annual Kurultai of the Endangered Cultural Heritage

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Keynote Speach Senior Lecturer Dr. Alan Reed Libert

Keynote Speach Two Types of Polyfunctionality (and their Relevance for Endangered Languages) Senior Lecturer Dr. Alan Reed Libert University of Newcastle, Australia

1. Introduction In this talk I will discuss the linguistic notion polyfunctionality and possible connections between it and endangered languages. I would like to stress that my remarks will be speculative and impressionistic, based on my years of looking at various languages, rather than being precise and statistically-based. In theory, polyfunctionality is a simple matter: it is the property of having more than one function (or use). Many everyday objects are polyfunctional, although probably usually not by design (i.e. they were designed with only one use in mind). Take, for example, forks. Their usual use is to pick up food, but they could be used as a weapon, if one were attacked and had nothing better to fight back with. Or, for a less violent example, towels are usually used to dry oneself or something with, but one could put them in the gap between a door and the floor to keep cold or noise out.

2. Language Polyfunctionality (Sociolinguistic Polyfunctionality) Polyfunctionality comes up in linguistics in two senses. One of these is in sociolinguistics, which is, very roughly, the study of language in societies, and I will look at this sense first, as it is the more obviously relevant one if we are concerned with endangered languages, as linguists often are. In this sense it refers to the use of a language (or dialect) in a range of contexts. For example, Langston and Peti-Stantić (2014:29) say the following: Another important feature of a fully developed standard language is its polyfunctionality. A standard language must be able to fulfill communicative functions in all spheres of human activity, ranging from scientific texts to routine daily interactions relating to basic human needs, and it must allow its users to express complex and/or abstract ideas in a precise manner. This pertains primarily to the lexicon, which must be enlarged through the

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Pratima Tete Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai, India Semantic Classification of Metonymic Paremia in English, Russian and Tatar Languages

43min
pages 182-218

Adylbek Kanimetov, PhD K. Tynystanov Issyk-Kul State University, Karakol, Kyrgyz Republic Алтай тектүү элдер XXI кылымдын босогосунда Amazigh International Film Festivals and the Promotion of Amazigh Cinema

33min
pages 155-168

Houssine Soussi, Ph.D National School of Business and Management. University of Ibn Zohr, Morocco Industrialization and Marginalization of the Adivasis: A study of Sundergarh District, Odisha, India

25min
pages 169-181

Gulnara Jamasheva, PhD National Academy of Sciences of Kyrgyz Republic, Ch.Aitmatov Institute of Linguistics and Literature, Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic CenturyThe Altai Indigenous Nations on the Threshold of the 21st

9min
pages 148-154

Nergis İmamoğlu Uludag University, Bursa, Turkey Osmanlı Dönemi Balkanlar’da Hristiyan Din Şehitliği ve Ortodoks Kimliğinin Yeniden İnşası (18.- 19. yy.) The Kyrgyz Language: Official or endangered?

19min
pages 138-147

Professor Nuredin Ibram, PhD Independent researcher, Constanta, Romania Limba tătară, încotro? Pledoarie pentru limba maternă Christian Martyrdom in Ottoman Balkans and Reconstruction of Orthodox Identity (18-19th c

31min
pages 122-137

IYIL 2019 – The International Year of Indigenous Languages AKECH 2019 - The 2nd Annual Kurultai of the Endangered Cultural Heritage

18min
pages 104-112

Senior Lecturer Dr. Alan Reed Libert University of Newcastle, Australia Research Papers Northern Culture and Well-being of the Older Population: A case study from Finnish and Swedish Lapland

1hr
pages 24-63

Kamrul Hossain, Ph.D Northern Institute for Environmental and Minority Law / Arctic Centre, University of Lapland, Finland Tatar Language, Where Does It Go? Defending Mother Tongue

16min
pages 113-121

Giuliana D’Oro University of Rome “La Sapienza”, Italy Where on Earth is Gállogieddi? Márkomeannu and the practices of decolonisation in the Markasami area

1hr
pages 64-91

Erika De Vivo University of Torino, Torino, Italy Ethnic and Social Challenges of Post-Disaster Housing: Case studies of Asparuhovo and Hitrino, northeast Bulgaria Yelis Erolova, PhD Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Studies with Ethnographic Museum at Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria

27min
pages 92-103

Abdulla Tukay The Anthem of the Tatar People Keynote Speach Interethnic Relations in the Years of Independence

9min
pages 10-15

Prof. Dr. Kurmanbek Kyyanovich Abdyldaev Rector of K. Tynystanov Issyk-Kul State University, Karakol, Kyrgyzstan Эгемендик жылдардагы улут аралык мамилелер Keynote Speach Two Types of Polyfunctionality (and their Relevance for Endangered Languages

19min
pages 16-23

Abdulla Tukay Native Language

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page 9
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