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Alignment Change in Iranian Languages - A Construction Grammar Approach (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R6,206
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Alignment Change in Iranian Languages - A Construction Grammar Approach (Hardcover)
Series: Empirical Approaches to Language Typology [EALT]
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The Iranian languages, due to their exceptional time-depth of
attestation, constitute one of the very few instances where a shift
from accusative alignment to split-ergativity is actually
documented. Yet remarkably, within historical syntax, the Iranian
case has received only very superficial coverage. This book
provides the first in-depth treatment of alignment change in
Iranian, from Old Persian (5 C. BC) to the present. The first part
of the book examines the claim that ergativity in Middle Iranian
emerged from an Old Iranian agented passive construction. This view
is rejected in favour of a theory which links the emergence of
ergativity to External Possession. Thus the primary mechanisms
involved is not reanalysis, but the extension of a pre-existing
construction. The notion of Non-Canonical Subjecthood plays a
pivotal role, which in the present account is linked to the
semantics of what is termed Indirect Participation. In the second
part of the book, a comparative look at contemporary West Iranian
is undertaken. It can be shown that throughout the subsequent
developments in the morphosyntax, distinct components such as
agreement, nominal case marking, or the grammar of cliticisation,
in fact developed remarkably independently of one another. It was
this de-coupling of sub-systems of the morphosyntax that led to the
notorious multiplicity of alignment types in Iranian, a fact that
also characterises past-tense alignments in the sister branch of
Indo-European, Indo-Aryan. Along with data from more than 20
Iranian languages, presented in a manner that renders them
accessible to the non-specialist, there is extensive discussion of
more general topics such as the adequacy of functional accounts of
changes in case systems, discourse pressure and the role of
animacy, the notion of drift, and the question of alignment in
early Indo-European.
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