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Differential place marking beyond place names : Evidence from two Amazonian languages

Skilton, Amalia and Obert, Karolin LU (2022) In Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 7(1).
Abstract
Not all spatial adjuncts behave alike. In some languages, certain spatial adjuncts display different marking or different combinatorial possibilities than others. Recent functional-typological studies make two claims about this differential place marking phenomenon: (1) it is primarily motivated by noun semantics, opposing place names and other nouns; and (2) it is primarily realized as a contrast between zero-marking and overt marking of spatial adjunct function. We evaluate this view against new fieldwork data from two Indigenous Amazonian languages, Dâw (Naduhup) and Ticuna (isolate). In Dâw and Ticuna, differential place marking is conditioned not only by noun semantics, but also by the perceptual properties of noun referents and by... (More)
Not all spatial adjuncts behave alike. In some languages, certain spatial adjuncts display different marking or different combinatorial possibilities than others. Recent functional-typological studies make two claims about this differential place marking phenomenon: (1) it is primarily motivated by noun semantics, opposing place names and other nouns; and (2) it is primarily realized as a contrast between zero-marking and overt marking of spatial adjunct function. We evaluate this view against new fieldwork data from two Indigenous Amazonian languages, Dâw (Naduhup) and Ticuna (isolate). In Dâw and Ticuna, differential place marking is conditioned not only by noun semantics, but also by the perceptual properties of noun referents and by morphosyntactic and semantic properties of verbs. Further, the phenomenon is realized not only by alternations between zero and overt marking, but also by alternations among overt markers and alternations in the set of markers with which the adjunct can combine. These findings suggest that differential place marking – like other differential case phenomena, such as split ergativity – is conditioned by a cross-linguistically diverse suite of factors within and beyond the noun phrase. (Less)
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author
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publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Differential Place Marking, Language of Space, Locative Adjuncts, Amazonian Languages, Dâw, Ticuna
in
Glossa: a journal of general linguistics
volume
7
issue
1
publisher
Ubiquity Press Ltd.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85129856166
ISSN
2397-1835
DOI
10.16995/glossa.6371
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
e74fccac-db7c-4cba-a206-7047f5150e6f
date added to LUP
2022-11-16 14:55:14
date last changed
2022-11-22 10:41:36
@article{e74fccac-db7c-4cba-a206-7047f5150e6f,
  abstract     = {{Not all spatial adjuncts behave alike. In some languages, certain spatial adjuncts display different marking or different combinatorial possibilities than others. Recent functional-typological studies make two claims about this differential place marking phenomenon: (1) it is primarily motivated by noun semantics, opposing place names and other nouns; and (2) it is primarily realized as a contrast between zero-marking and overt marking of spatial adjunct function. We evaluate this view against new fieldwork data from two Indigenous Amazonian languages, Dâw (Naduhup) and Ticuna (isolate). In Dâw and Ticuna, differential place marking is conditioned not only by noun semantics, but also by the perceptual properties of noun referents and by morphosyntactic and semantic properties of verbs. Further, the phenomenon is realized not only by alternations between zero and overt marking, but also by alternations among overt markers and alternations in the set of markers with which the adjunct can combine. These findings suggest that differential place marking – like other differential case phenomena, such as split ergativity – is conditioned by a cross-linguistically diverse suite of factors within and beyond the noun phrase.}},
  author       = {{Skilton, Amalia and Obert, Karolin}},
  issn         = {{2397-1835}},
  keywords     = {{Differential Place Marking; Language of Space; Locative Adjuncts; Amazonian Languages; Dâw; Ticuna}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Ubiquity Press Ltd.}},
  series       = {{Glossa: a journal of general linguistics}},
  title        = {{Differential place marking beyond place names : Evidence from two Amazonian languages}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.16995/glossa.6371}},
  doi          = {{10.16995/glossa.6371}},
  volume       = {{7}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}