
Contrastive Studies in Verbal Valency
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Content
- Intro
- Contrastive Studies in Verbal Valency
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu In Memoriam
- Issues in contrastive valency studies
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Valency and valency alternation in linguistic theory and description
- 2.1 Derivational designs
- 2.2 Subsumption designs
- 2.3 Larger structures
- 3. Typological/contrastive studies of valency
- 4. Contributions to the volume
- References
- Argument coding
- Multiple case binding - The principled underspecification of case exponency
- 1. How morphological case receives its category status
- 1.1 The tradition - and where it falls short
- 1.2 Syntagmatic case vs. paradigmatic case
- 1.3 Syntagmatic case vs. paradigmatic case decided
- 1.4 Case in wider context
- 2. Case determining dependency (among which: governing) status
- 2.1 General
- 2.2 Paradigmatic case in synchrony and diachrony
- 2.2.1 Towards the encoding of argument differentiality
- 2.2.2 The accusative-prepositional case drift
- 2.2.3 The subject nominative-genitive differential
- 2.2.4 The object accusative-genitive differential
- 2.2.5 The diachronic introduction of the article function
- 2.3 Paradigmatic case assignment today
- 2.3.1 The case-aspect differential
- 2.3.2 The case-definiteness differential
- 2.3.4 The negation-object case differential
- 2.3.5 The adjectival-information structural differential
- 2.5 Case with and without category status: The bare case-prepositional case differential
- 2.5.1 Theta function and case sharing one single syntactic slot
- 2.5.2 Theta function and case not sharing one single syntactic slot
- 2.5.3 Apparent homo-functionalism
- 3. Subject differential marking as a sub-phenomenon of paradigmatic case assignment.
- 3.1 DSM in Turkish
- 3.2 DSM in Pontic Greek
- 4. Differential argument marking as a more general phenomenon of paradigmatic case assignment
- 5. Back to the notions of paradigmaticity as opposed to syntagmaticity - and the corresponding types of case assignment
- 6. Outlook - and a partial caveat
- References
- Infinitives
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Selected infinitives
- 2.1 Tense and Aspect infinitive constructions (TA constructions)
- 2.2 Norwegian and German Aspect constructions
- 2.3 First form infinitive constructions
- 2.3.1 Hypotactic chains and infinitives
- 2.3.2 Modal verbs
- 2.3.3 Perception verbs
- 3. Subject and object control
- 3.1 Subject control
- 3.2 Object control
- 3.2.1 Object control in a case language
- 3.2.2 Deontic switch control
- 4. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- A labeling system for valency
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The 'Construction Labeling' (CL) notation
- 3. Labeling valence patterns of English and Norwegian
- 3.1 Syntactic argument structure of Norwegian
- 3.2 Illustrating CL on simple patterns in Norwegian and English
- 3.3 Shared complex patterns
- 3.4 Un-shared complex patterns
- 3.5 Valency profiles
- 4. Valency and construction patterns of Ga
- 4.1 Patterns
- 4.2 Summarizing remarks
- 5. Utilizing CL notation in Grammar and in Ontology
- 5.1 Grammatical interpretation of CL templates
- 5.2 Induction of grammar from Interlinear Glossed Text (IGT) and CL jointly
- 5.3 Using CL templates for designing a construction ontology.
- 6. 'Life cycles' of systems and applications using CL
- 7. Comparisons with 'Coding frames' in' ValPal'
- 8. Final remarks
- References
- Appendix
- Non-canonical valency patterns in Basque, variation and evolution
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Coding frames
- 3. Non-canonical coding frames
- 4. Some particularities of Basque valency grammar
- 4.1 Valency-changing derivations and valency alternations
- 4.2 Verbs and light verb compounds
- 4.3 Anaphoric and non-specific readings of unexpressed absolutive arguments
- 4.4 Atypical objects
- 4.5 The fuzziness of the unergative vs. transitive distinction
- 5. The expansion of coding frames lacking an absolutive slot in the history of Basque
- 5.1 Occasional changes and general tendencies
- 5.2 From 'strict' to 'loose' ergative coding: Evidence from aiming verbs
- 5.3 Relaxing the constraint on the obligatory presence of an absolutive term in predicative constructions
- 5.4 The integration of borrowed verbs
- 5.4.1 The situation in Modern Basque
- 5.4.2 The situation in Old Basque
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Valency rearranging alternations
- Exploring the domain of ditransitive constructions
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Basic alignment types
- 3. Alignment variation and lexical splits in ditransitive constructions
- 4. Lexical splits in the ditransitive domain
- 4.1 Ditransitive-Allative Hierarchy
- 4.2 Ditransitive-Benefactive Hierarchy
- 4.3 Ditransitive-Instrumental Hierarchy
- 4.4 Combining subhierarchies
- 5. Towards a semantic map for ditransitive constructions
- 5.1 Ditransitive domain
- 5.2 Ditransitive constructions in Mandarin
- 5.3 Ditransitive constructions in CAY Eskimo
- 5.4 Ditransitive constructions in Thai
- 5.5 Ditransitive constructions in Yorùbá
- 5.6 Some more maps and alignments splits
- 6. Further application of the map
- 6.1 Constraining indexing
- 6.2 Applicative split
- 7. Problematic patterns
- 7.1 Interference of structural factors
- 7.2 Verb polysemy and pattern inheritance
- 8. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Cognate constructions in Italian and beyond
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Cognates in Italian and other languages
- 2.1 Types of cognate constructions
- 2.2 Preliminary remarks on the syntactic status of COs in Italian
- 2.3 Outline of the article
- 3. Cognate constructions in Italian
- 3.1 Methods and data
- 3.2 Verb classes
- 3.2.1 Emission verbs
- 3.2.2 (Re-)Creation verbs
- 3.2.3 Motion verbs
- 3.2.4 Weather verbs
- 3.2.5 Manner of Speaking verbs
- 3.3 Discussion
- 3.3.1 Italian COC
- 3.3.2 Italian COC
- 3.4 Cognate Object Constructions vs. Light Verb Constructions
- 4. Cognate Constructions with prepositions
- 4.1 COC vs. OF-pattern
- 4.2 A crosslinguistic look
- 4.3 The role of the WITH-pattern
- 5. Concluding remarks
- References
- Object omission and the semantics of predicates in Italian in a comparative perspective
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Object omission, event structure and transitivity
- 2.1 Event structure and the licensing of arguments
- 2.1.1 Structure vs constant/root participants and argument realization
- 2.2 The (in)transitivity continuum and the semanto-pragmatics of object omission7
- 3. The semantics of predicates and object omission in Italian
- 3.1 (Sub)types of object omission*
- 3.1.1 Indefinite Null Instantiation (Perfective and imperfective contexts)
- 3.1.2 Indefinite Null Instantiation (Imperfective contexts only)
- 3.1.3 Definite Null Instantiation
- 3.1.4 Unexpressed objects and event structure in Italian
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- On animacy restrictions for the null object in Brazilian Portuguese
- 1. Introduction
- 2. On null objects in Brazilian Portuguese
- 2.1 Properties of BP null objects
- 2.2 Analyzing null objects in BP
- 3. On animacy in BP null objects
- 4. On parallelism requirements
- 5. On argument structure and the parallelism requiremen
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Voice and valency changing (uncoded/coded) alternations and markers
- Between Passive and Middle
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Verbs with two non-active voice morphologies
- 3. Middle and Passive Voice in Greek
- 3.1 Voice morphology in Ancient Greek
- 3.2 A corpus study
- 3.3 Koine Greek
- 4. Conclusion
- References
- Valency alternations between inflection and derivation
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The inflection / derivation continuum
- 3. Deriving valency changes across inflection and derivation
- 4. The peculiar status of valency alternations
- 5. Valency alternations as a morphological operation
- 6. Valency alternations in Italian and German
- 6.1 IM-Relating valency alternations
- 6.2 DM-Relating valency alternations
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Pronominal verbs across European languages
- 1. Pronominal verbs across European languages
- 2. Non-alternating pronominal verbs
- 3. Alternating pronominal verbs
- 4. Conclusions and lines for further research
- References
- Semantic constraints on the reflexive/non-reflexive alternation of Romanian unaccusatives
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Romanian data
- 2.1 The values of Romanian se
- 2.1.1 Se as a reflexive/reciprocal pronoun
- 2.1.2 Se as a formative of inherently reflexive predicates
- 2.1.3 Anticausative se3
- 2.1.4 Summary
- 2.1.5 Se as a voice marker
- 2.2 The reflexive/non-reflexive alternation of Romanian unaccusatives
- 2.2.1 Preliminary remarks
- 2.2.2 Inventory of alternating unaccusatives
- 3. Romanian vs Romance
- 4. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Circumfixed causatives in Polish against a panorama of active and non-active voice morphology
- 1. Morpho-syntax from the generative perspective
- 1.1 Derivational and root-based approaches to morpho-syntactic problems
- 1.2 The root-based model for valency phenomena
- 1.3 Causative/anticausative morpho-syntax (Alexiadou & Doron 2012)
- 2. The data
- 2.1 Circumfixed causatives in Polish
- 2.2 Circumfixed causatives in related languages
- 3. Causative semantics of anticausatives
- 4. Structural representation of causation
- 5. The roots appearing in the valency enhancement/valency reduction alternation
- 6. Statives with corresponding causatives
- 6.1 Statives
- 6.2 Causatives from the roots marked as [+ predicates of states], [+ predicates of events] vis-à-vis the lack of corresponding anticausatives
- 6.3 Statives with the roots marked as [+ predicates of states] and [+ predicates of events] vis-à-vis the lack of corresponding anticausatives
- 7. Experiencer verbs with corresponding causatives
- 8. Sie anticausatives in Polish
- 9. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Corpora
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