This article is a study of subject-like possessors and experiencers in Neo-Aramaic. These are expressed through person affixes on verbs and verboids that historically go back to a dative preposition—the marker of recipients. Based on a cross-dialectal study of their clause structure, the paper argues that these arguments are non-canonical subjects whose morphosyntax is still reminiscent of their original recipient-like function. The identical marking of the agent of past perfective verbs and these non-canonical subjects are likely to be ultimately historically related and part of the overall typology of the language area, since some of these constructions have close parallels in Iranian languages.NWODescriptive and Comparative Linguistic
INTRODUCTION In this research, we have had an exact categorization for different kinds of derivation...
Stative Experiencer Verbs such as need, lack, miss, like, etc. have several ways of argument realiza...
As is well known, case syncretism is a phenomenon that has taken place in many Indo-European languag...
In several of the world’s languages, it has been observed that there is one ‘canonical’ and another ...
The paper discusses a number of experiencer predicates in Hittite and argues that they display diffe...
The so-called dative subject constructions, where what appears to be a subject is marked by a dative...
This volume is an important contribution to the diachrony of non-canonical subjects in a typological...
This volume is an important contribution to the diachrony of non-canonical subjects in a typological...
The dative-marked argument of the verb dokéō ‘seem’ in Classical Greek displays syntactic, semanti...
This study is the first wide-scope morpho-syntactic comparative study of North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic d...
It is worth mentioning Benveniste’s well-known 1960 study where, on the basis of examples from many ...
This dissertation explores interactions between grammatical/viewpoint aspect and argument licensing ...
Th e authors are interested in the semantic ( = not formal) evolution of the dative case relationshi...
One of the functions of the dative is to mark non-prototypical subjects, i. e. subjects that somehow...
In several ancient and modern Indo-European languages, the partitive-genitive may be used in place o...
INTRODUCTION In this research, we have had an exact categorization for different kinds of derivation...
Stative Experiencer Verbs such as need, lack, miss, like, etc. have several ways of argument realiza...
As is well known, case syncretism is a phenomenon that has taken place in many Indo-European languag...
In several of the world’s languages, it has been observed that there is one ‘canonical’ and another ...
The paper discusses a number of experiencer predicates in Hittite and argues that they display diffe...
The so-called dative subject constructions, where what appears to be a subject is marked by a dative...
This volume is an important contribution to the diachrony of non-canonical subjects in a typological...
This volume is an important contribution to the diachrony of non-canonical subjects in a typological...
The dative-marked argument of the verb dokéō ‘seem’ in Classical Greek displays syntactic, semanti...
This study is the first wide-scope morpho-syntactic comparative study of North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic d...
It is worth mentioning Benveniste’s well-known 1960 study where, on the basis of examples from many ...
This dissertation explores interactions between grammatical/viewpoint aspect and argument licensing ...
Th e authors are interested in the semantic ( = not formal) evolution of the dative case relationshi...
One of the functions of the dative is to mark non-prototypical subjects, i. e. subjects that somehow...
In several ancient and modern Indo-European languages, the partitive-genitive may be used in place o...
INTRODUCTION In this research, we have had an exact categorization for different kinds of derivation...
Stative Experiencer Verbs such as need, lack, miss, like, etc. have several ways of argument realiza...
As is well known, case syncretism is a phenomenon that has taken place in many Indo-European languag...