Morpho-syntax. February 20 and 22, 2017

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Morpho-syntax February 20 and 22, 2017

Core Arguments The core arguments of a verb are Actor, Undergoer, and Recipient: The student gave books to the teacher. Actor undergoer recipient These are typically expressed as subject, object, and indirect object.

Transitive, Intransitive, Ditransitive Transitive (actor and undergoer) The student saw the teacher. Intransitive (actor) The student studied. Intransitive (undergoer) The student disappeared. Ditransitive (actor, undergoer, and recipient) The student gave books to the teacher.

Distinguishing Actor and Undergoer (Grammatical Encoding) The student bit the dog The dog bit the student

Grammatical Encoding Word order Case Marking Agreement with verb

We looked at three kinds of case marking

Japanese (Nominative-Accusative) We invented the case marker gwa as a combination of ga (nominative) and wa (topic).

Japanese Case Marking Student gwa teacher wo saw. Student gwa returned. Student gwa teacher ni book wo gave. Gwa is nominative Wo is accusative

Basque (Ergative-Absolutive)

Basque Case Marking Student-the-k teacher-the saw(sg-sg) Student-the returned Student-the-k teacher-the-ri book-the gave(sg-sg-sg) -k is ergative Ø is absolutive The verb agrees with the subject, object, and indirect object.

Hindi (Ergative in the past tense and differential object marking)

Additional Properties of Basic Sentences Adpositions and oblique cases Negation Tense

Oblique (not core argument) Other arguments of a verb are oblique: I thought about linguistics. I loaded the truck with hay. I loaded hay onto the truck. I ate ice cream with a spoon. I walked with my friend. I gave the speech without anger. I ran to school from home along the river. I slept in my bed during the night. I sold a book for ten dollars.

Exponence of oblique marking Adposition Preposition Postposition Lots of case markers Instrumental, illative, allative, etc. Adposition plus case marker To (preposition) him (case) Of (preposition) mine (case) Serial verbs or co-verbs Take knife cut bread = cut the bread with a knife Run cross field = run across field

TAM: Tense, Aspect, Mood

Tense Present Happening at the time of speech Past Happened before the time of speech Future Will happen after the time of speech

Aspect Perfective I ran when I saw him. Imperfective I was running when I saw him. Confusing terminology: perfective means something different from perfect in linguistics.

Mood Real The student read a book Unreal Conditional If the student read a book Subjunctive I recommend that he go Imperative Go!

TAM: languages blur the distinction between tense, aspect, and mood Things in the past and the present are real. Things in the future are unreal. Things in the past are more finished (perfective). Things in the present and future are less finished (imperfective).

Two-Tense systems Past-Nonpast (e.g., Japanese) May actually be a perfective-nonperfective Future-Nonfuture May actually be real-unreal

Multi-tense systems Mythical past Used in a creation story Remote past Recent past I just saw her. Present Near future I m about to see her. Distant future

Varieties and Exponence of TAM http://wals.info/feature/21b#2/25.5/151.9 http://wals.info/feature/66a#2/25.5/148.4 http://wals.info/feature/67a#2/25.5/148.4 http://wals.info/feature/69a#2/18.0/152.9

Adding a reference point Bertrand Russell S: Time of speech E: Time of the event R: A reference point Perfect (not Perfective) Past perfect: At 10am, I had (already ) seen her. The reference point (10am) is before the time of speech and the event (seeing her) is before the reference point. Future perfect: At 3pm, I will have already seen her. The reference point (3pm) is after the time of speech and the event (seeing her) is before the reference point.

Beware of English Don t copy the morphology or syntax of English. Think about what it means and then create your own syntax and morphology.

Beware of the English Present Perfect It is not present and it is not perfect What is it? I have just eaten. recent past I have eaten breakfast. Past with some present relevance I have been to Paris. Experiential past Look up English present perfect usage to see more.

Beware of English If I go, I will see him. Other languages say If I will go, I will see him If I had gone, I would have seen him This has a special meaning. It is counterfactual; I did not go. He was going tomorrow. What does this mean? He said he was going tomorrow. Sequence of tenses He would go tomorrow He said he would go tomorrow

Beware of English English tenses are made up of Inflected verbs Saw sees Auxiliary verbs will have be do Participles seen seeing

What about Chinese? Chinese has a series of Tense-Aspect particles that do not translate directly into English. It is not necessary to have one in each sentence. This is mind boggling to Europeans who s sentences must have a finite verb or auxiliary verb: *She seeing, *She to see, She seen (Past tense in some dialects, not good in others) She sees She saw She is seeing She has seen She does see

But other languages have obligatory things that we don t express Inclusive and exclusive first person plural Singular and plural second person Evidentiality (obligatorily marked in Quechua) first hand: She read the book. I saw her read it. hearsay: They say she read the book. concluded from evidence: She must have read the book. She knew the story.

Negation I am reading I am not reading I read I do not read Some students left No students left

Linguistic Exponence of Negation World Atlas of Language Structures http://wals.info/chapter/143 Separate word Morpheme attached to verb Obligatory double negative Optional double negative Multiple strategies Example: Multiple negation strategies depending on tense Also Wolof (Senegal), Armenian

Negative sentences can have different morpho-syntax http://wals.info/chapter/113

See also http://wals.info/feature Type negation in the search box My favorite negation sentence: It ain t no chicken can t get into no coop. Can mean no chicken can get into a coop

Negative Polarity Items *Any people are here. Some people are here. I don t think any people are here. Are any people here? I doubt that any people are here?

Scope ambiguity with quantifiers and negation All doors will not be open. This is said regularly on Amtrak. It is not the case that all doors will be open. Go to the door that the conductor directs you to. For all doors, it is the case that they will not be open. How can I get off the train?

Special Sentence Types Copula PEL: Possession, Existence, Location Question Command Modality Passive voice Comparison

Copula Identity Clark Kent is superman. She is the teacher. Role She is a teacher. Definition A square is a four sided equi-angled polygon. Permanent property She is tall Temporary property She is in Pittsburgh

Zero copula languages All tenses Some tenses She teacher

PEL PEL language Possession: A book is to me Existence A book is Location The book is on the table English I have a book There is a book A book exists The book is on the table There is a book on the table

Negation, Tense, and PEL English Hebrew Turkish Russian There is a book on the table. There isn t a book on the table. Yesh sefer al ha shulxan. (There is a book on the table.) Eyn sefer al ha shulxan. (There is not a book on the table.) Kösede bir kahve var. (There is a book on the corner.) Kösede bir kahve yok. (There is not a book on the corner) Jest kniga na stolje. (There is a book on the table.) Njet knigi na stolje. (There is not a book on the table.) There was a book on the table. There wasn t a book on the table. Haya sefer al ha shulxan. (There was a book on the table.) Lo haya sefer al ha shulxan. (There was not a book on the table.)

Questions Closed (yes-no) Open ( wh )

Closed questions Don t copy English s crazy pattern If there is no auxiliary verb, add do You eat sushi You do eat sushi Move do or other auxiliary verb to the left of the subject. Are you eating sushi? Do you eat sushi? If negation is contracted, move it with the auxiliary verb Don t you eat sushi? Aren t you eating sushi? Haven t you eaten sushi? Otherwise, leave negation after the subject Have you not eaten sushi?

Other ways to make closed questions A question particle like Mandarin ma or Japanese ka. Intonation Put a focus marker on the noun that is really in question. You-foc wash dishes? Was it you who washed the dishes? You wash-foc dishes? Is what you did washing dishes? You wash dishes-? Was it dishes that you washed?

Closed questions: what answer do you expect? Have you washed the dishes? Haven t you washed the dishes? Expect the answer to be yes or no?

Open questions Who, what, where, when, why, how, which X, whose X In situ You ate what? Displaced Which sushi you ate? Resumptive pronoun Whose sushi you ate it?

Fillers and gaps Who you talk to? Who is the filler is the gap To whom you talk? What you eat? Who you try to talk to? People who have taken a syntax class know a lot about fillers and gaps.

Open Questions Mixed strategies Displacement for Subject and Object, but resumptive pronoun for everything else What you ate? Who ate sushi? Who you talked to her? Who you talked to her sister?

Modality Epistemic (status of knowledge) Certain She definitely read the book. Uncertain She might have read the book. Auxiliary verb She probably read the book. Adverb She is likely to have read the book. Adjective She seems to have read the book. Verb

Modality Deontic (Obligation) I require that you go. You should go. Not going won t do Paraphrasing Japanese You are allowed to go. I permit you to go. I let you go.

Modality Ability You are able to read the book. You can play the piano.

Exponence of Modality In human languages, modality can be expressed with almost any part of speech. Consider also that many human languages have potential (ability) as an affix: eat-can = able to eat

What is passive voice? Many students have read the book. The book has been read by many students. A change in alignment between semantic roles (actor and undergoer) and grammatical relations (subject and object).

Active Voice The actor is the subject. The actor has the linear position, case marking, and/or verb agreement of a subject. She has eaten them. She has nominative case She is to the left of the verb The verb is has, agreeing with she

Passive voice The undergoer is the subject. The undergoer has the linear position, case marking, and/or verb agreement of the subject. They have been eaten by her They is to the left of the verb They has nominative case The verb is have, agreeing with they

Exponence of passive voice English uses a system of auxiliary verbs and past participles. Other languages use an affix. person-nom eat cookie-acc cookie-nom eat-pass person-oblique The oblique case or adposition can be by, with, to, etc. It isn t always by.

If you are interested, ask me about antipassive in Ergative langauges

Comparison X is more Y than Z Z is the standard against which X is compared Y is the scale on which X and Z are compared There are markers on Y (more) and Z (than) in English. In many languages there is no marker on Y. X than-z is Y

Try some creative things for comparison X is Y compared to Z X is Y, exceeds/surpasses Z