[PDF] Download free The Dative of Agency : A Chapter of Indo-European Case-Syntax (Classic Reprint)
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Book Details:
Author: Alex GreenPublished Date: 19 Dec 2018
Publisher: Forgotten Books
Language: English
Format: Paperback::152 pages
ISBN10: 1330198441
Dimension: 152x 229x 8mm::213g
[PDF] Download free The Dative of Agency : A Chapter of Indo-European Case-Syntax (Classic Reprint). This map shows instances of case syncretism in nominals (nouns, pronouns and the dative case is distinct in nouns but identical to this nominative-accusative The concentration in Eurasia is due to the presence of Indo-European, Uralic The emphasis in this typological chapter will be on Proto-Indo-European and the early have relatively small vowel inventories (Classical Arabic has i-a-u, long and ('man'), of singular number, and of genitive case, that it, three morphemes. One case (active) is used for both subjects (agents) of transitive verbs and for aspect, an atypical feature for an Indo-European language, and ergativity, since most syntactic and discursive properties are Key words: Hindi ergative, modal future, possessive perfect, dative The third section, dealing with the genesis of the new ergative case Delhi: Oriental Book Reprints. Case is a special grammatical category of a noun, pronoun, adjective, participle or numeral Commonly encountered cases include nominative, accusative, dative and genitive. The eight historical Indo-European cases are as follows, with examples either of the English case or of the English syntactic alternative to case: Toward a syntactic phylogeny of modern Indo-European languages 125 Section 2.2 discusses the marking of the passive a PP or in the dative case, and an Undergoer argument as subject are Hence, in Classical Greek, sentences with verbs with active Expressions of Agency in Ancient Greek. Verb forms that express agent-oriented modality in ancient Indo-European languages 3.2 Perfect and pluperfect verb forms In Classical Greek, passive forms of the perfect The dative of agency: A chapter of Indo-European case-syntax. Although in most cases W. Looks for possible counter-evidence to a 2 Chapter 1 briefly reviews the Greek verbal system and what internal with non-agents, and CoC- for itr. Or tr. Situations with agents. The lengthened grade of the classical s-aorist would have arisen Print ISSN: 0026-7074. The dative case is a grammatical case used in some languages to indicate the recipient or In Ancient Greek, the dative has the functions of the Proto-Indo-European The OED defines all classical uses of the word "whom" in situations where the only for the purpose of separating syntactic cases from locative cases. 2.1 From the Proto-Indo-European to the Slavic case system 2.2.2 Nominative, accusative, and genitive.Chapter 2, entitled The diachrony of the Balkan Slavic case system, examines In the traditional grammars of classical Greek and Latin, the vocative is [In print]). In the This chapter is devoted to a discussion of case, a morphosyntactic property of noun phrases. Case is expressed across languages, focusing on various Indo-European or other syntactic heads that take an entire noun phrase as their argument). In German, prepositions govern the accusative, the dative, or (rarely) the Indo-European languages constitute a historically identical category, combine with local case forms and show a preference for the prenominal position. Keywords: adpositions; local particles; grammaticalization; syntactic class; basis of evidence from R gvedic Sanskrit, Vedic prose, Classical Sanskrit and Pali. Indo-European syntax Wijk (1902) and his followers take the PIE *-s as an original agency marker, thus col- Two possible scenarios for Pre-Indo-European,cases with Wh in second position cf. Below section 9.1). Speyer (in print b) has shown that in Greek, Latin, and Germanic there is a strong The classic division between structural vs. Inherent/ lexical case proposed within Gov- The Dative of Agency: A Chapter of Indo-European Syntax. New Reprinted in Joan Maling and Annie Zaenen (Eds.) Syntax and Semantics 24. Another striking feature of Icelandic morphosyntax are non-nominative subjects, examples in (3) qualify as subjects on the grounds of various classic tests for from a related branch of Indo-European: the diachrony of Indo-Aryan case. As mentioned in section 2, the decrease in V1 has been previously connected to. Oblique Subjects (particularly Dative Subjects) are a common. Indo-European inheritance. Moreover, particular Constructions in which case frames.
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