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Abstract:
This talk will be concerned with the questioning strategies shown by speaker of ƢĀkhoe
HaiƠƠom, a Khoisan language spoken by a hunter-gatherer community in northern Namibia.
My data consists of question answer sequences collected from video recordings of natural
conversations. I will discuss the way questions are posed in natural conversation, the
interactional functions the questions are used for and the manner in which the questions are
responded to. The main finding concerns ƢĀkhoe question distribution which is markedly
different to that of other languages that participated in the Max-Planck-Institute’s Questions
Project. Where ƢĀkhoe speakers rely most heavily on content questions, speakers of the
other nine languages that participated (American English, Danish, Dutch, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Lao, Tzeltal and Yélî Dnye) all show a higher use of polar questions. I will argue that
the explanation for this difference lies in the interplay of the grammatical form of a question
and its interactional function. Speakers of ƢĀkhoe perform different social actions than the
speakers of the other languages. I also find that speakers of ƢĀkhoe HaiƠƠom address fewer
questions to a specific individual than would be expected from prior research on Indo
European languages. Finally I will discuss some possible explanations for both these findings
which I propose can be found in the culture of the speakers.