Artigo Revisado por pares

Two Types of Syntactic Noun Incorporation: Noun Incorporation in Mapudungun and its Typological Implications

2005; Linguistic Society of America; Volume: 81; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1353/lan.2005.0003

ISSN

1535-0665

Autores

Mark C. Baker, Roberto Aranovich, Lucía A. Golluscio,

Tópico(s)

Spanish Linguistics and Language Studies

Resumo

NOUN INCORPORATION (NI) in Mapudungun is different from NI in better-studied languages like Mohawk in three ways: the incorporated noun is invisible to verbal agreement, incorporation into unaccusative verbs is impossible unless a possessor is stranded, and possessors are the only modifiers that can be stranded. These differences can be explained by saying that the trace of NI retains its person, number, and gender features in Mohawk but not in Mapudungun. Those aspects of grammar that do not involve these features treat NI in the two languages the same; thus, NI has the same gross distribution and anaphoric possibilities in both languages. We extend these results to Nahuatl, Chukchee, Ainu, Southern Tiwa, Mayali, and Wichita, showing that our theory accounts for MithunÕs (1984) distinction between Type III and Type IV noun incorporation in a general way.

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