Ross Lovestrand SWL8
Ross Lovestrand SWL8
Ross Lovestrand SWL8
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Is there such a thing as a
serializing
language?
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Defining SVCs
Definitions of Serial Verb Constructions (SVCs) are
inconsistent and controversial (cf. Zwicky 1990, Haspelmath 2016)
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Defining SVCs
SVCs often defined ostensively or by analogy to other
languages known to be ‘serializing’
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Our working definition
(Ross et al. 2015; Ross forthcoming)
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SVCs distribution
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Serializing languages?
Many attempts have been made to identify languages with
SVCs as a certain type, e.g., with typological correlations
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Prominence of SVCs
Languages vary greatly regarding how many types of SVCs
are found, and also the frequency of their use
Dixon (2006:338) reports wide range of frequency by sentence
for languages in the Aikhenvald & Dixon (2006) volume:
Tariana >70%
Ewe, Eastern Kayah Li, Dumo 50-70%
Goemai, Thai, Tetun Dili, Olutec, Cantonese 20-50%
Mwotlap, Toqabaqita, Lakota 5-20%
Khwe <1%
Whether one type or many, frequent or rare, all attested
SVCs are counted in the current survey…
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Outliers
Outliers in the sample provide some insight into variation
A number of languages in the sample do not closely resemble
traditional ‘serializing’ languages yet have constructions that
meet the definitional criteria to be considered SVCs
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English
An especially marginal case for SVCs
A number of candidate constructions, most excluded
For example: go get / come see (restricted to uninflected usage)
At least one type meets criteria, perception SVCs:
I saw him fall. I heard her sing.
Although not the most traditional type, SVC by definition
compare: Kofi fringi a buku fadon. ‘Kofi threw the book
down.’
Kofi throw the book fall.’ (Sranan, Sebba 1987:97)
Consider also ‘help (me) fix…’ and ‘make him fix…’
More typical multi-verb constructions excluded due to form:
Go and get / sit reading / take the food and eat it …
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Methodology
Determine the distribution of four well-known SVC types
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SVC types
Various typologies of SVCs by semantic type have been
proposed, and not all types accepted by all researchers
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Survey of 4 types
In order to compare the distribution of SVCs by semantic
type, we have selected four common and well-known types:
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Results (summary)
All of these types occur independently in different groups of
languages with SVCs, some more frequently than others
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Motion SVCs
“Every serializing language I have encountered includes a category of motion serialization,
where a verb of motion is combined with some other verb in such a way that the motion verb
comes first and the moving argument is the Agent of the second verb.” (Durie 1997:310)
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Motion SVCs
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TAKE SVCs
TAKE SVCs are a type of valency-increasing SVCs
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TAKE SVCs
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Posture SVCs
Posture verbs SIT, STAND and LIE often combine with
other lexical verbs as a sort of manner construction
For Lao, Enfield (2002) called this associated posture
Some detailed studies of languages, e.g. Hellwig (2003) on Goemai
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Posture SVCs
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Comparative SVCs
Verb (PASS, EXCEED, etc.) introduces object of comparison
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Comparative SVCs
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Distribution of types
5 languages had no surveyed types, while 6 have all four
When we focus on the languages with more than one type, they
begin to resemble the traditional concept of ‘serializing’ languages…
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2 or more SVC types
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Signed Languages
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Conclusions
SVCs with similar semantics do recur in unrelated languages
The myth of ‘serializing’ languages:
No semantic type is found in all languages with SVCs
Some languages with SVCs have none of the characteristic types
Traditional idea of serializing languages based on prototypes
Generalizations from systematic data are critical to accurate typologies!
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