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Chapter 15. Early Indo-European dialects and innovations of aspect systems

  • Jadranka Gvozdanović
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company
Historical Linguistics 2015
This chapter is in the book Historical Linguistics 2015

Abstract

Dialectal grouping of early Indo-European is usually reconstructed by listing phonological, grammatical, and lexical similarities, without asking the question of whether these properties constitute typologically coherent sets that may have determined further developments. Moreover, the dialectal differentiation of early Indo-European is viewed as a rather linear process, whereas a closer look at the properties suggests intermediate discontinuities and alliances with longer-lasting effects. This paper addresses these issues generally and specifically in the realm of aspect and tense systems. The case in point is particularly aspect, often addressed in discussions, but so far never systematically investigated for the early period. The analysis presented here reveals the following essential paths in the development of aspect systems: by extension of spatial preverb semantics into the temporal sphere, by extension of light-verb semantics into the temporal sphere, or by extension of the combined aspectotemporal system. The essential division is between spatial semantics developing into temporal semantics and tense developing into a marker of aspect. The paper discusses the development paths, typological constellations, and the evidence from aspect systems on the early differentiation of Indo-European, which crosscuts the hitherto reconstructed groupings based on single properties and areal divisions.

Abstract

Dialectal grouping of early Indo-European is usually reconstructed by listing phonological, grammatical, and lexical similarities, without asking the question of whether these properties constitute typologically coherent sets that may have determined further developments. Moreover, the dialectal differentiation of early Indo-European is viewed as a rather linear process, whereas a closer look at the properties suggests intermediate discontinuities and alliances with longer-lasting effects. This paper addresses these issues generally and specifically in the realm of aspect and tense systems. The case in point is particularly aspect, often addressed in discussions, but so far never systematically investigated for the early period. The analysis presented here reveals the following essential paths in the development of aspect systems: by extension of spatial preverb semantics into the temporal sphere, by extension of light-verb semantics into the temporal sphere, or by extension of the combined aspectotemporal system. The essential division is between spatial semantics developing into temporal semantics and tense developing into a marker of aspect. The paper discusses the development paths, typological constellations, and the evidence from aspect systems on the early differentiation of Indo-European, which crosscuts the hitherto reconstructed groupings based on single properties and areal divisions.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Introduction 1
  4. Part I. Phonology
  5. Chapter 1. Old Irish consonant quality re-examined 11
  6. Chapter 2. The use of the past to explain the past 27
  7. Chapter 3. Pertinacity in loanwords 57
  8. Part II. Morphology
  9. Chapter 4. Ablaut in Armenian nasal declension 77
  10. Chapter 5. Gender and declension mismatches in West Nordic 97
  11. Chapter 6. The development of gender and countability effects in German ung - and English ing -nominals 115
  12. Chapter 7. Where do Italian - ata nouns come from? 133
  13. Chapter 8. Diachrony and morphological equilibrium 149
  14. Chapter 9. Anti-relevant, contra-iconic but system-adequate 171
  15. Part III. Morphosyntax
  16. Chapter 10. Impersonal passives and the suffix - r in the Indo-European languages 187
  17. Chapter 11. The Old English verbal prefixes for- and ge- 217
  18. Part IV. Syntax
  19. Chapter 12. Enclitic -( m ) a ‘but’ / -( y ) a ‘and’ in Hittite 245
  20. Chapter 13. State representation and dynamic processes in Homeric Greek 271
  21. Chapter 14. Effecting a change 287
  22. Chapter 15. Early Indo-European dialects and innovations of aspect systems 301
  23. Chapter 16. Perfecting the notion of Sprachbund 319
  24. Chapter 17. Parameters in the development of Romance perfective auxiliary selection 343
  25. Chapter 18. Adverbs and the left periphery of non-finite clauses in Old Spanish 385
  26. Part V. Diachronic typology
  27. Chapter 19. The sources of antipassive constructions 405
  28. Chapter 20. A diachronic account of converbal constructions in Old Rajasthani 423
  29. Part VI. Semantics and pragmatics
  30. Chapter 21. The locative alternation with spray/load verbs in Old English 445
  31. Chapter 22. Penetration of French-origin lexis in Middle English occupational domains 459
  32. Chapter 23. Meaning change from superlatives to definite descriptions 479
  33. Chapter 24. Towards diachronic word classes universals 501
  34. Chapter 25. Grammaticalizing the face in a first generation sign language 519
  35. Part VII. Language contact, variation and diffusion
  36. Chapter 26. Linguistic divergence under contact 563
  37. Chapter 27. Roots and branches of variation across dialects of English 593
  38. Chapter 28. Waves in computer simulations of linguistic diffusion 615
  39. Index 631
  40. Language index 637
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