A typology of marked-S languages

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Case-systems all over the world exhibit striking similarities. In most lan- guages intransitive subjects (S) receives less overt marking than one of the two transitive arguments (agent-like A or patient-like P); the other one of these two arguments is usually encoded by the same form as S. In some languages the amount of overt marking is identical between S, A, and P. But hardly ever does the S argument receive more  Read more...

Author(s): Corinna Handschuh
Series: Studies in Diversity Linguistics 1
Publisher: Language Science Press
Year: 2014

Language: English
Commentary: freely available on http://langsci-press.org/catalog/book/18
Pages: 281
City: Berlin

I. Preliminaries

1. Introduction
2. Redefining alignment

II. The contexts studied

3. Nominal predication
4. Existential and locational predication
5. Emphatic subjects
6. Subjects of non-basic clauses
7. Non-clause-level case marking

III. Analysis of the data

8. Typological comparison of marked-S languages
9. Conclusion