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dc.contributor.authorTom J. F. Tillemans-
dc.contributor.authorDerek D. Herforth-
dc.date.accessioned2018-12-21T04:13:29Z-
dc.date.available2018-12-21T04:13:29Z-
dc.date.issued1989-
dc.identifier.urihttp://tnt.ussh.edu.vn:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/846-
dc.descriptionWhile most discussions in the vast corpus of grammatical literature in Tibetan must in some way or another refer back to the two seminal treatises attributed to Thon mi Sambhota, viz. the Sum cu pa and the rTags kyi 'jug pa, it is useful to divide this mass of exegesis on Thon mi into two basic periods. For a rough-and-ready idea we could follow some modern Tibetan grammarians and speak of "earlier" (srïon) and "later" (phyi) grammar, but in fact the division is better represented if we speak of "pre-Si tu" grammarians on the one hand and Si tu and "post-Si tu" grammarians on the other, thus highlighting the enormous contribution of Si tu Pan chen Chos kyi 'byun gnas (gTsug lag chos kyi snan ba) (1699-1774)en_US
dc.description.abstractPREFACE ; BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TIBETAN WORKS ; BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SECONDARY SOURCES ; ABBREVIATIONS ; I. INTRODUCTION: TRADITIONAL TIBETAN GRAMMAR ON BDAG9 GZAN AND RELATED NOTIONS ; A. The basic notions at stake ; B. Some historical remarks on pre-Si tu developments ; C. A survey of some of the post-Si tu literature on self and other ; D. Si tu's dictum on act-qua-doing being in the present, etc. ; E. Appendixes ; 1. Contemporary developments: autonomous and other-dependent verbs ; 2. Tshe ten tabs drun's list of the major commentaries on the Sum cu pa and rTags kyi 'jug pa ; II. TRANSLATIONS AND TIBETAN TEXTS ; Tibetan text and English translation of the rTags kyi jugpaï dka' gnas bdag gzan dan by a byed las gsum gyi khyad par üb tu phye ba nun gsal 'phrul gyi Ide mig by A kya Yons 'dzin dByans can dga' ba'i bio gros; Tibetan text and English translation of an excerpt on bdag and gzan from Si tu Pan chen's commentary on the Sum cu pa and rTags kyi jug pa entitled the mKhas pa'i mgul rgyan mu tig phren mdzes ; Notes to the translations ; III. TRANSITIVITY AND VOICE: THE PERSPECTIVE FROM TIBET ; 1. Introduction ; 2. Case-marking ; 2.1 Transitive vs. intransitive clauses ; 3. Tense/aspect and "argument prominence" ; 3.1 The data ; 4. The futures and other periphrastic forms ; 4.1 Agreement in terms of prominence ; 5. The Tibetan labelling of arguments ; 6. Conclusions and unsolved problems ; Appendix: A note on the ergative split in classical Tibetan ; Table: The vocabulary of traditional Tibetan grammatical analysis ; IV. GLOSSARIES AND INDEXES ; Glossary of Tibetan technical terms ; Glossary of the principal linguistic terms used ; Index of proper names ; Index of terms ;en_US
dc.description.tableofcontentsPREFACE V BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TIBETAN WORKS xii BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SECONDARY SOURCES xvii ABBREVIATIONS xxiii I. INTRODUCTION: TRADITIONAL TIBETAN GRAMMAR ON BDAG9 GZAN AND RELATED NOTIONS 1 A. The basic notions at stake 3 B. Some historical remarks on pre-Si tu developments 8 C. A survey of some of the post-Si tu literature on self and other 13 D. Si tu's dictum on act-qua-doing being in the present, etc. 19 E. Appendixes 27 1. Contemporary developments: autonomous and other-dependent verbs 27 2. Tshe ten tabs drun's list of the major commentaries on the Sum cu pa and rTags kyi 'jug pa 29 II. TRANSLATIONS AND TIBETAN TEXTS 37 Tibetan text and English translation of the rTags kyi jugpaï dka' gnas bdag gzan dan by a byed las gsum gyi khyad par üb tu phye ba nun gsal 'phrul gyi Ide mig by A kya Yons 'dzin dByans can dga' ba'i bio gros 39 Tibetan text and English translation of an excerpt on bdag and gzan from Si tu Pan chen's commentary on the Sum cu pa and rTags kyi jug pa entitled the mKhas pa'i mgul rgyan mu tig phren mdzes 61 Notes to the translations 71 III. TRANSITIVITY AND VOICE: THE PERSPECTIVE FROM TIBET 75 1. Introduction 75 2. Case-marking 77 2.1 Transitive vs. intransitive clauses 78 3. Tense/aspect and "argument prominence" 80 3.1 The data 82 4. The futures and other periphrastic forms 88 4.1 Agreement in terms of prominence 89 5. The Tibetan labelling of arguments 90 6. Conclusions and unsolved problems 91 Appendix: A note on the ergative split in classical Tibetan 93 Table: The vocabulary of traditional Tibetan grammatical analysis 97 IV. GLOSSARIES AND INDEXES 99 Glossary of Tibetan technical terms 101 Glossary of the principal linguistic terms used 105 Index of proper names 107 Index of terms 111en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherARBEITSKREIS FÜR TIBETISCHE UND BUDDHISTISCHE STUDIEN UNIVERSITÄT WIENen_US
dc.subjectKinh điển và triết học phật giáoen_US
dc.titleAgents and Actions in Classical Tibetanen_US
dc.typeBooken_US
Appears in Collections:CSDL Phật giáo

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