Classifier (Athapaskan linguistics)

In Athabaskan linguistics, the term classifier is traditionally used for a class of verbal prefixes that modifiy the transitivity or valence of the verb in some way.

Examples
Slave (Rice 1989:455)


 * tse dé-Ø-k'ǫ́ ‘the wood is burning’


 * tse dé-h-k'ǫ́ ‘she burned the wood’

The prefix h- is a transitivizing classifier.

Tlingit has perhaps the most complex form of the classifier, with three variables encoded in a portmanteau morpheme. (Examples from Naish & Story p. 373.)


 * at wusiteen (at-wu-Ø-si-teen | INDN.OBJ - PERF - 3SUBJ - CL [+I, s, −D]-see|) “he saw it”
 * sh wudziteen (sh-wu-Ø-dzi-teen | RFLX.OBJ - PERF - 3SUBJ - CL [+I, s, +D]-see|) “he saw himself”

Comments
The term “classifier” is sometimes derided by those working in Athabaskan lanuages, e.g. by Kibrik (1993):


 * “This term...is a clear misnomer since so-called classifiers do not classify either verb lexical entries or verb arguments — as it was originally supposed — in any reasonable sense. ... The unhappy nature of the term “classifier” is recognized by many Athabaskanists (see Krauss 1969, Cook 1984:162, Young and Morgan 1987:117, Thompson 1989:9, Rice 1989:439). However, the listed authors still use the term preferring to preserve the continuous tradition. I propose to abandon this harmful term that keeps misleading both newcomers to the field of Athabaskan linguistics and non-Athabaskan linguists.”

Kibrik’s commentary however neglects the fact that in Tlingit, a relative of the Athabaskan family, the classifier is still used to some extent as part of the verbal classification system. For example, the following verbs differ only in their use of the classifier to indicate the class of the object (Naish & Story 1973:376).


 * dáanaa x̱waatáw (dáanaa wu-x̱a-ya-táw |money PERF - 1SG.SUBJ - CL -steal|) “I stole money”
 * atshiḵóok x̱wasitáw (atshiḵóok wu-x̱a-si-táw |radio PERF - 1SG.SUBJ - CL -steal|) “I stole a radio”

Synonym

 * transitivity indicator — proposed by Kibrik (1993:48)
 * extensor — used by Naish and Story, e.g. Story (1966), Naish (1966), Naish & Story (1973)

Origin
The term dates back “to the early work by Boas on Tlingit and by Sapir on Athabaskan” (Kibrik 1993:48). Recent historical work by Jeff Leer has reconstructed the classifier for the entire Na-Dené family (Leer 2008:22).