10 results on '"lexical aspect"'
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2. Compound and Complex Predicates in Japanese
- Author
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Kageyama, Taro
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Historical Developments from Middle to Early New Indo-Aryan
- Author
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Bubenik, Vit
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Compound and Complex Predicates in Japanese
- Author
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Taro Kageyama
- Subjects
Computer science ,Compounding ,Lexical aspect ,Grammaticalization ,Linguistics - Abstract
Compound and complex predicates—predicates that consist of two or more lexical items and function as the predicate of a single sentence—present an important class of linguistic objects that pertain to an enormously wide range of issues in the interactions of morphology, phonology, syntax, and semantics. Japanese makes extensive use of compounding to expand a single verb into a complex one. These compounding processes range over multiple modules of the grammatical system, thus straddling the borders between morphology, syntax, phonology, and semantics. In terms of degree of phonological integration, two types of compound predicates can be distinguished. In the first type, called tight compound predicates, two elements from the native lexical stratum are tightly fused and inflect as a whole for tense. In this group, Verb-Verb compound verbs such as arai-nagasu [wash-let.flow] ‘to wash away’ and hare-agaru [sky.be.clear-go.up] ‘for the sky to clear up entirely’ are preponderant in numbers and productivity over Noun-Verb compound verbs such as tema-doru [time-take] ‘to take a lot of time (to finish).’ The second type, called loose compound predicates, takes the form of “Noun + Predicate (Verbal Noun [VN] or Adjectival Noun [AN]),” as in post-syntactic compounds like [sinsya : koonyuu] no okyakusama ([new.car : purchase] GEN customers) ‘customer(s) who purchase(d) a new car,’ where the symbol “:” stands for a short phonological break. Remarkably, loose compounding allows combinations of a transitive VN with its agent subject (external argument), as in [Supirubaagu : seisaku] no eiga ([Spielberg : produce] GEN film) ‘a film/films that Spielberg produces/produced’—a pattern that is illegitimate in tight compounds and has in fact been considered universally impossible in the world’s languages in verbal compounding and noun incorporation. In addition to a huge variety of tight and loose compound predicates, Japanese has an additional class of syntactic constructions that as a whole function as complex predicates. Typical examples are the light verb construction, where a clause headed by a VN is followed by the light verb suru ‘do,’ as in Tomodati wa sinsya o koonyuu (sae) sita [friend TOP new.car ACC purchase (even) did] ‘My friend (even) bought a new car’ and the human physical attribute construction, as in Sensei wa aoi me o site-iru [teacher TOP blue eye ACC do-ing] ‘My teacher has blue eyes.’ In these constructions, the nominal phrases immediately preceding the verb suru are semantically characterized as indefinite and non-referential and reject syntactic operations such as movement and deletion. The semantic indefiniteness and syntactic immobility of the NPs involved are also observed with a construction composed of a human subject and the verb aru ‘be,’ as Gakkai ni wa oozei no sankasya ga atta ‘There was a large number of participants at the conference.’ The constellation of such “word-like” properties shared by these compound and complex predicates poses challenging problems for current theories of morphology-syntax-semantics interactions with regard to such topics as lexical integrity, morphological compounding, syntactic incorporation, semantic incorporation, pseudo-incorporation, and indefinite/non-referential NPs.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Historical Developments from Middle to Early New Indo-Aryan
- Author
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Vit Bubenik
- Subjects
Geography ,Indo aryan ,Lexical aspect ,Grammatical aspect ,Linguistics - Abstract
While in phonology Middle Indo-Aryan (MIA) dialects preserved the phonological system of Old Indo-Aryan (OIA) virtually intact, their morphosyntax underwent far-reaching changes, which altered fundamentally the synthetic morphology of earlier Prākrits in the direction of the analytic typology of New Indo-Aryan (NIA). Speaking holistically, the “accusative alignment” of OIA (Vedic Sanskrit) was restructured as an “ergative alignment” in Western IA languages, and it is precisely during the Late MIA period (ca. 5th–12th centuries ce) when we can observe these matters in statu nascendi. There is copious literature on the origin of the ergative construction: passive-to-ergative reanalysis; the ergative hypothesis, i.e., that the passive construction of OIA was already ergative; and a compromise stance that neither the former nor the latter approach is fully adequate. In the spirit of the complementary view of these matters, more attention has to be paid to various pathways in which typological changes operated over different kinds of nominal, pronominal and verbal constituents during the crucial MIA period. (a) We shall start with the restructuring of the nominal case system in terms of the reduction of the number of cases from seven to four. This phonologically motivated process resulted ultimately in the rise of the binary distinction of the “absolutive” versus “oblique” case at the end of the MIA period). (b) The crucial role of animacy in the restructuring of the pronominal system and the rise of the “double-oblique” system in Ardha-Māgadhī and Western Apabhramśa will be explicated. (c) In the verbal system we witness complete remodeling of the aspectual system as a consequence of the loss of earlier synthetic forms expressing the perfective (Aorist) and “retrospective” (Perfect) aspect. Early Prākrits (Pāli) preserved their sigmatic Aorists (and the sigmatic Future) until late MIA centuries, while on the Iranian side the loss of the “sigmatic” aorist was accelerated in Middle Persian by the “weakening” of s > h > Ø. (d) The development and the establishment of “ergative alignment” at the end of the MIA period will be presented as a consequence of the above typological changes: the rise of the “absolutive” vs. “oblique” case system; the loss of the finite morphology of the perfective and retrospective aspect; and the recreation of the aspectual contrast of perfectivity by means of quasinominal (participial) forms. (e) Concurrently with the development toward the analyticity in grammatical aspect, we witness the evolution of lexical aspect (Aktionsart) ushering in the florescence of “serial” verbs in New Indo-Aryan. On the whole, a contingency view of alignment considers the increase in ergativity as a by-product of the restoration of the OIA aspectual triad: Imperfective–Perfective–Perfect (in morphological terms Present–Aorist–Perfect). The NIA Perfective and Perfect are aligned ergatively, while their finite OIA ancestors (Aorist and Perfect) were aligned accusatively. Detailed linguistic analysis of Middle Indo-Aryan texts offers us a unique opportunity for a deeper comprehension of the formative period of the NIA state of affairs.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Lexical and Grammatical Aspect
- Author
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Angeliek van Hout
- Subjects
Computer science ,Learnability ,Lexical aspect ,Tense–aspect–mood ,Telicity ,Grammatical category ,State of affairs ,Grammatical aspect ,Variety (linguistics) ,Linguistics - Abstract
The temporality of a given situation ‘out there in the world’ can be described in many ways. Tense and aspect offer the essential parameters. Lexical aspect characterizes event descriptions; a situation with a sleeping child can be referred to as a state of affairs (be asleep) or as a happening (sleep, wake up). Grammatical aspect imposes a perspective by focusing a particular time slice of a situation, such as the ongoing process (the baby was sleeping, mom was waking up the baby), the event as a whole (the baby slept, mom woke up the baby), or the resulting state (the baby has slept, mom has woken the baby up). Tense locates a situation at a certain time (was sleeping, is sleeping, will sleep). Temporality is thus determined by the three grammatical notions of lexical aspect, grammatical aspect and tense. Tense anchors the time of an event vis-a-vis a reference time, often the moment of speech. Aspect imposes one or more layers of temporal structure on the event time thus defining its temporal properties. Lexical aspect (also called “situation type”, “inner aspect”, “Aktionsart”) characterizes the temporal contour, while grammatical aspect (or “viewpoint aspect”) determines the temporal viewpoint on the run-time of the event. The grammatical expression of aspect varies enormously: while there are languages with one, a few or many types of aspectual markers, other languages have no dedicated aspect markers whatsoever. In some languages tense and aspect morphology is conflated. This crosslinguistic variation makes aspect an interesting domain of linguistic investigation and a wide variety of acquisition studies have investigated aspect development in children, raising questions about its universal versus language-specific properties. In this chapter I review the acquisition literature of lexical and grammatical aspect; tense is beyond its scope. Section 2 summarizes the fundamental generalizations and linguistic analyses of the two types of aspect, and presents the cross-linguistic variation in aspect expression which leads to issues of learnability. Section 3 presents the acquisition literature for lexical aspect, and section 4 does the same for grammatical aspect. Section 5 draws conclusions about the coverage of aspect acquisition research to date and presents an outlook on novel directions of research.
- Published
- 2016
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7. Lexical Aspect
- Author
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Filip, Hana and Binnick, Robert I., book editor
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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8. Perfective and Imperfective Aspect
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Gvozdanović, Jadranka and Binnick, Robert I., book editor
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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9. Case
- Author
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Richardson, Kylie and Binnick, Robert I., book editor
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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10. Perfective and Imperfective Aspect
- Author
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Jadranka Gvozdanović
- Subjects
History ,Lexical aspect ,Imperfective aspect ,Tense–aspect–mood ,Slavic languages ,Grammatical aspect ,Linguistics - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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