Subject marking in Awing

Q2 Arts and Humanities Studies in African Linguistics Pub Date : 2021-04-23 DOI:10.32473/sal.v50i1.118528
H. Fominyam, Doreen Georgi
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Abstract

This paper investigates the principles that govern subject marking in Awing (Grassfields Bantu). We observe that the subject marker (SM) that doubles the subject is sometimes obligatory, sometimes optional and sometimes prohibited. We argue that it is the referentiality of the subject that controls the distribution of the SM in Awing, rather than factors such as its morpho-syntactic features or its information structural status, which have been identified to govern argument doubling in a number of other languages with a similar phenomenon. The empirical evidence leads us to conclude that the SM is a pronominal element in Awing rather than an agreement marker. When it occurs, it functions as the argument of the verb and the associated subject NP is base-generated in the left periphery of the clause; when it is absent, the NP is the verbal argument. Awing thus qualifies as a pronominal argument language in the sense of Jelinek (1984); Bresnan and Mchombo (1987); Baker (1996).
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在Awing的主题标记
本文探讨了在Awing(Grasfields Bantu)中支配主体标记的原则。我们观察到,使主语加倍的主语标记(SM)有时是强制性的,有时是可选的,有时也是禁止的。我们认为,控制Awing中SM分布的是主体的指称性,而不是其形态句法特征或信息结构状态等因素,这些因素已被确定为控制其他一些具有类似现象的语言中的论点加倍。经验证据使我们得出结论,SM是Awing中的代词元素,而不是协议标记。当它出现时,它充当动词的自变量,相关的主语NP是在从句的左边缘生成的基;当NP不存在时,它就是口头论证。因此,Awing在Jelinek(1984)的意义上是一种代词论证语言;Bresnan和Mchombo(1987);Baker(1996)。
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来源期刊
Studies in African Linguistics
Studies in African Linguistics Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
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