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Ergativity - Emerging Issues

English · Paperback / Softback

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This volume presents a collection of papers on the enticing and complex theme of Ergativity. The papers exemplify theoretical depth applied to a wide range of languages, with the majority of papers based on original fieldwork. Ergativity refers to a grammatical pattern in which the logical subject of intransitive clauses and the logical object of transitive clauses share some grammatical features, and in this respect differ from transitive subjects. The shared features are often case and/or agreement, but a variety of other relevant features have also been isolated in the literature. The ergative pattern contrasts with that found in accusative languages where the subject has the same grammatical marking in intransitive and transitive clauses, while the object has different marking. Ergativity provides us with an ideal testing ground for claims about the range and limits of language variation, and about the degree of elasticity in the morphology-syntax interface. However, because an understanding of ergativity rests on an understanding of other difficult grammatical issues such as grammatical relations, transitivity, aspect, person, case, and agreement, a clear and integrated analysis of the phenomenon has remained elusive. Since Dixon's (1967/1972) pioneer study of Dyirbal, extensive research has been conducted on a variety of ergative languages over the world from both descriptive, typological, and theoretical perspectives (see inter alia Anderson 1976, Silverstein 1976, Comrie 1978, Dixon 1979, 1994, DeLancey 1981, Marantz 1984, Levin & Massam 1985, Johns 1992, Bittner and Hale 1996, to name a few).

List of contents

Acknowledgements. Preface.- Part I: The Cases. The Locus of Ergative Case Assignment: Evidence from Scope. Neither Absolutive nor Ergartive is Nominative or Accusative. Eccentric Agreement and Multiple Case Checking. Syntactic Ergativity in Tongan.- Part II: Splits. A Parametric Syntax of Aspectually Conditioned Split-Ergativity. Split Absolutive. Deriving Split Ergativity in the Progressive. On "Ergativity" in Halkomelem Salish. Tree-Geometric Relational Hierarchies and Nuumiipuutímt (Nez Perce) Case.- Part III: Antipassive. Antipassive Morphology and Case Assignment in Inuktitut. The Ergativity Parameter: A View from Antipassive. Ergativity and Change Inuktitut.- Part IV: The Range of Ergativity. Ergativity in Austronesian Languages. The Split Verb as a Source of Morphological Ergativity.- Index.

Summary

This volume presents a collection of papers on the enticing and complex theme of Ergativity. The papers exemplify theoretical depth applied to a wide range of languages, with the majority of papers based on original fieldwork. Ergativity refers to a grammatical pattern in which the logical subject of intransitive clauses and the logical object of transitive clauses share some grammatical features, and in this respect differ from transitive subjects. The shared features are often case and/or agreement, but a variety of other relevant features have also been isolated in the literature. The ergative pattern contrasts with that found in accusative languages where the subject has the same grammatical marking in intransitive and transitive clauses, while the object has different marking. Ergativity provides us with an ideal testing ground for claims about the range and limits of language variation, and about the degree of elasticity in the morphology-syntax interface. However, because an understanding of ergativity rests on an understanding of other difficult grammatical issues such as grammatical relations, transitivity, aspect, person, case, and agreement, a clear and integrated analysis of the phenomenon has remained elusive. Since Dixon’s (1967/1972) pioneer study of Dyirbal, extensive research has been conducted on a variety of ergative languages over the world from both descriptive, typological, and theoretical perspectives (see inter alia Anderson 1976, Silverstein 1976, Comrie 1978, Dixon 1979, 1994, DeLancey 1981, Marantz 1984, Levin & Massam 1985, Johns 1992, Bittner and Hale 1996, to name a few).

Additional text

From the reviews:

"...an important and valuable resource due to two factors: (i) its theoretical import concerning issues related to ergativity, and (ii) data from many endangered languages, often coming from the author's own fieldwork." (Patrycja Jablonska, LinguistList 19.2107)

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From the reviews:
"...an important and valuable resource due to two factors: (i) its theoretical import concerning issues related to ergativity, and (ii) data from many endangered languages, often coming from the author's own fieldwork." (Patrycja Jablonska, LinguistList 19.2107)

Product details

Assisted by Alana Johns (Editor), Dian Massam (Editor), Diane Massam (Editor), Juvenal Ndayiragije (Editor)
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 24.01.2011
 
EAN 9781402041877
ISBN 978-1-4020-4187-7
No. of pages 360
Illustrations XII, 360 p.
Series Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory
Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

Syntax, C, Grammar, Social Sciences, Grammar, syntax & morphology, Theoretical Linguistics / Grammar

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