Boekhandel Douwes Den Haag

Oxford Studies of Endangered Languages

Niuean

Predicates and Arguments in an Isolating Language

Diane (Professor Emeritus Massam

Niuean

Oxford Studies of Endangered Languages

Niuean

Predicates and Arguments in an Isolating Language

Oxford Studies of Endangered Languages: Niuean

 

This volume explores predication in Niuean, an endangered Polynesian language spoken on the island of Niue and in New Zealand. It extends our understanding of cross-linguistic sentence structure and grammatical case, and will be of interest to scholars in the fields of Austronesian linguistics, typology, and theoretical linguistics.


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Beschrijving Oxford Studies of Endangered Languages: Niuean

This volume explores the grammar of Niuean, an endangered Polynesian language spoken on the island of Niue and in New Zealand, with a focus on the issue of predication. Since Aristotle, it has been claimed that a sentence consists of a subject and a predicate. Niuean constitutes the perfect testing ground for this claim: it displays verb-subject-object word order, in which the subject interrupts the predicate, and has an ergative case system, in which subjects are not clearly distinguished from objects in their marking for grammatical case.

Diane Massam uses the framework of generative grammar to carry out a detailed analysis of the internal structure of Niuean predicates and arguments, as well as the relations between them, touching on many other topics including the nature of displacement, word formation, determiners, and thematic roles. The proposal is that Niuean complex predicates are formed via successive inversion, prior to the merge of all arguments (high argument merge), and that the predicate undergoes fronting to initial position across the arguments, with the same structure found also in nominal clauses. The conclusion is that Niuean does not have a subject in the usual sense, and this is related to the fact that the language has isolating morphology, lacking all tense and agreement inflection and nominative case. Instead, the language exhibits low absolutive predication, applicative ergative agents, and predicate fronting in lieu of subject extraction. The book extends our understanding of cross-linguistic sentence structure and grammatical case, and will be of interest to scholars in the fields of Austronesian linguistics, typology, and theoretical linguistics.


ISBN
9780198793557
Pagina's
384
Verschenen
Serie
Oxford Studies of Endangered Languages
Rubriek
Taalkunde
Druk
1
Uitvoering
Hardback
Taal
Engels
Uitgever
OUP Oxford

Taalkunde