This book is a most welcome contribution to our knowledge of what noun classification is like in highly polysynthetic prefixing Australian languages; it introduces important theoretical points and is a 'must-have' for every serious linguist and linguistic anthropologist — it is full of important generalizations and insights, together with startlingly complicated language data.
- Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald (The Australian National University, Canberra) in Studies in Language 22(3),
This is a most useful collection of papers, adding to our knowledge of the organization and development (and loss) of noun class systems in Australia, and making a significant contribution to the general typological theory of noun classes.
- R.M.W. Dixon, Australian Journal of Linguistics, Volume 19(1),