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321 Pages·2010·1.91 MB·English
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Transitivity Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today (LA) Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today (LA) provides a platform for original monograph studies into synchronic and diachronic linguistics. Studies in LA confront empirical and theoretical problems as these are currently discussed in syntax, semantics, morphology, phonology, and systematic pragmatics with the aim to establish robust empirical generalizations within a universalistic perspective. General Editors Werner Abraham Elly van Gelderen University of Vienna / Arizona State University Rijksuniversiteit Groningen Advisory Editorial Board Josef Bayer Christer Platzack University of Konstanz University of Lund Cedric Boeckx Ian Roberts ICREA/Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Cambridge University Guglielmo Cinque Lisa deMena Travis University of Venice McGill University Liliane Haegeman Sten Vikner University of Ghent University of Aarhus Hubert Haider C. Jan-Wouter Zwart University of Salzburg University of Groningen Terje Lohndal University of Maryland Volume 166 Transitivity. Form, Meaning, Acquisition, and Processing Edited by Patrick Brandt and Marco García García Transitivity Form, Meaning, Acquisition, and Processing Edited by Patrick Brandt University of Cologne Marco García García University of Freiburg John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam / Philadelphia TM The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of 8 American National Standard for Information Sciences – Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ansi z39.48-1984. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Transitivity : form, meaning, acquisition, and processing / edited by Patrick Brandt, Marco Garcia García. p. cm. (Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, issn 0166-0829 ; v. 166) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Grammar, Comparative and general--Transitivity. 2. Dependency grammar. 3. Seman- tics. I. Brandt, Patrick. II. García, Marco Garcia. P291.T73 2010 415--dc22 2010022886 isbn 978 90 272 5549 5 (Hb ; alk. paper) isbn 978 90 272 8781 6 (Eb) © 2010 – John Benjamins B.V. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher. John Benjamins Publishing Co. · P.O. Box 36224 · 1020 me Amsterdam · The Netherlands John Benjamins North America · P.O. Box 27519 · Philadelphia pa 19118-0519 · usa Table of contents Acknowledgments vii Trans-duction 1 Patrick Brandt & Marco García García part i. Form and meaning Types of transitivity, intransitive objects, and untransitivity – and the logic of their structural designs: Ways to keep apart derivation in syntax and in the lexicon 15 Werner Abraham The interaction of transitivity features in the Sinhala involitive 69 John Beavers & Cala Zubair Transitivity in Chinese experiencer object verbs 95 Elisabeth Verhoeven Non-zero/non-zero alternations in differential object marking 119 Stefan Keine & Gereon Müller part ii. Acquisition and processing Children and transitivity: The subject-object asymmetry in a natural setting 143 Lotte Hogeweg & Helen de Hoop Grammatical transitivity vs. interpretive distinctness: The case for a separation of two levels of representation that are often conflated 161 Matthias Schlesewsky, Kamal Kumar Choudhary & Ina Bornkessel-Schlesewsky part iii. Transitivity and diathesis The space between one and two: Transitives, intransitives and the middle voice 191 Kees de Schepper Event-structure and individuation in impersonal passives 209 Beatrice Primus vi Transitivity: Form, Meaning, Acquisition, and Processing part iv. Crosslinguistic and crosscategorical considerations Lability and spontaneity 237 Alexander Letuchiy Transitivity of deverbal nominals and aspectual modifiers of the verbal stem (evidence from Russian) 257 Anna Pazelskaya Individuation and semantic role interpretation in the adpositional domain 279 Sander Lestrade & Peter de Swart Language index 301 Subject index 303 Acknowledgments The papers in this volume were first presented at a workshop on Transitivity at the University of Cologne in November 2008. Individual people and institutions helped bring about the event and book in important ways. Beatrice Primus and Daniel Jacob provided constant support at all levels, from the inception to the conceptualization and concretion. The Centre for Language Diversity and Multilingualism (ZSM) at the University of Cologne was a backbone in the organization of the workshop, and many helpers brought in their minds and arms and feet to make it succeed. For their assistance, concrete or ideal, we would like to thank in particular Karin Barber, Christiane M. Bongartz, Susanne Couturier, Martin Evertz, Riccarda Fasanella, Nele Franz, Thomas Grandrath, Linda Kronenberg, Helge Kuhnert, Jürgen Lenerz, Claudia Riehl, Astrid Rothe, Timo Röttger, Imke Scheib, Frank Slotta, and Nico Spindler. Special thanks go to the Fritz Thyssen Foundation for financial support that enabled getting everybody to Cologne and accommodating them. From the abstracts offered to the workshop, less than half could be selected for oral or poster presentation. Unfortunately, the talks by Leila Behrens, by Daniel Jacob and by John Peterson, as well as the talks by Eva Kardos and Gergely Pethö and by Roland Pfau and Markus Steinbach could not be written up and included as papers here. Those that were have benefitted from the critique and advice of our team of reviewers: Sebastian Bank, Olga Borik, Leston Buell, Berit Gehrke, Kleanthes Grohmann, Ingo Feldhausen, Klaus von Heusinger, Joost Kremers, Silvia Kutscher, Helen Leuninger, Marijana Marelij, John Peterson, Wolfgang Raible, György Rákosi, Mara van Schaik-Radulescu, Rachel Szekely, and Dirk Vetter. Martine van Marsbergen and Kees Vaes at Benjamins were excellently patient and helpful in the production of the book. Thanks, finally, to Werner Abraham as author, advisor, and institution at the all-connecting interface. Trans-duction Patrick Brandt & Marco García García University of Cologne/University of Freiburg 1. Transitive ideals The adjective transitive is used by linguists in different ways that are related to one another in different ways. In logic, transitive means for a relation R to have the property in (1), where “∧” is logical conjunction and “⊃” material implication in standard propositional calculus: (1) xRy ∧ yRz ⊃ xRz transitive (1) means that if the relation holds between x and y and y and z, it also holds between x and z. Apart from the logical and (the editors believe) un-challenged definition, much is to be said about the meaning of the term in a theory of grammar that subscribes to basic principles of empirical science. Morphologically, transitive is less complex than intransitive (and ditransitive). This is remarkable, since, at first blush, one would think that from the point of view of semantics, intransitive, that is, one-place predications, should be simpler than two-place predications, which is what transitive constructions, whatever their definition will turn out to be, are commonly taken to code. 1.1 One and two place predications and functions Keeping aside ditransitive predications and keeping to “ordinary individuals” for the moment, let us look at the one vs. two place distinction respecting properties and functions. Following standard Fregean practice, one place predicates can be modelled as one place functions that take you from individuals to truth values. (2) Peter sleeps |= Peter ∈ SLP The meaning of an ordinary one place predication thus corresponds to a subset of the domain of ordinary individuals (like persons or things), namely those that are in the extension of the one place property denoted by the predicative expression. Analogously, two place predications are standardly taken to correspond to functions that take you from pairs of individuals to truth values. (3) Peter loves Mary |= 〈Peter, Mary〉 ∈ LOV

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What happens when a canonically transitive form meets a canonically transitive meaning, and what happens when this doesn’t happen? How do dyadic forms relate to monadic ones, and what are the entailments of the operations that the grammar uses to relate one to the other? Collecting original expert
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