In the present paper, we concentrate on (selected) Bantu and Nilotic bare-passive strategies and lay out the basis for a typology of transitive passive constructions in these languages. We argue that bare-passives constitute an optimal strategy to change prominence relations between arguments, in languages that strongly hold to the default mapping between the highest thematic role available and the grammatical subject (i.e. Spec,TP). The Nilotic and Bantu languages discussed here differ in their way of satisfying this default mapping. In particular, impersonal bare-passives satisfy it by resorting to an agentive place-holder (an indefinite subject marker) and realizing the logical agent as a lower thematic/semantic role (e.g. instrument or ...
260 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.The present study is intended...
In this paper we show that the Bantu A70 languages did not preserve the passive morpheme inherited f...
The majority of world’s languages do not have passive, and the function passive fulfills can be fulf...
This article presents an analysis of a particular passive-like syntactic construction in Dholuo, a N...
In this article, we examine two word order inversion constructions in Mbuun, a Bantu language which ...
Counter to findings in English, German and Hebrew, recent acquisition studies have shown that passiv...
This paper examines two different passive formations in Malagasy. Although one passive appears to pr...
This paper examines two different passive formations in Malagasy. Although one passive appears to pr...
Bemba employs two passive constructions: an older one with verbal extension -w- and a more recent co...
In this chapter we shall examine the characteristic properties of a construction widespread in the w...
This presentation will explore a set of cognate constructions in the Southern Nilotic family that ha...
This article discusses the Ndebele passive derivation using the Lexical Mapping Theory (henceforth L...
The Passive Voice is a category which we find in the large majority of natural languages, and also i...
The passive construction is acquired relatively late by children learning to speak many languages, w...
Passivization has been characterized as a strictly morphological phenomenon. Some definitions of pas...
260 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.The present study is intended...
In this paper we show that the Bantu A70 languages did not preserve the passive morpheme inherited f...
The majority of world’s languages do not have passive, and the function passive fulfills can be fulf...
This article presents an analysis of a particular passive-like syntactic construction in Dholuo, a N...
In this article, we examine two word order inversion constructions in Mbuun, a Bantu language which ...
Counter to findings in English, German and Hebrew, recent acquisition studies have shown that passiv...
This paper examines two different passive formations in Malagasy. Although one passive appears to pr...
This paper examines two different passive formations in Malagasy. Although one passive appears to pr...
Bemba employs two passive constructions: an older one with verbal extension -w- and a more recent co...
In this chapter we shall examine the characteristic properties of a construction widespread in the w...
This presentation will explore a set of cognate constructions in the Southern Nilotic family that ha...
This article discusses the Ndebele passive derivation using the Lexical Mapping Theory (henceforth L...
The Passive Voice is a category which we find in the large majority of natural languages, and also i...
The passive construction is acquired relatively late by children learning to speak many languages, w...
Passivization has been characterized as a strictly morphological phenomenon. Some definitions of pas...
260 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.The present study is intended...
In this paper we show that the Bantu A70 languages did not preserve the passive morpheme inherited f...
The majority of world’s languages do not have passive, and the function passive fulfills can be fulf...