Neuters to none
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Mary Ann Walter
Abstract
This study documents a diachronic change in the status of neuter noun gender in Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian (BCS). Previous research demonstrates that the neuter class is closed in BCS (Simonović 2010), and that recent loanwords from western European languages fitting its phonological profile are instead classed as masculine. I show that this is not the case for earlier loanwords from Turkish. New neuter nouns are still accepted, and when changed, are classed as feminine, not masculine. This follows an attested pattern of assigning gender according to lexical distributions. An account of gender assignment utilizing Optimality Theory and incorporating gradiently-ranked constraints captures this pattern in which rankings can shift over time, thus leading to the observed historical changes in rates of neuter gender assignment.
Abstract
This study documents a diachronic change in the status of neuter noun gender in Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian (BCS). Previous research demonstrates that the neuter class is closed in BCS (Simonović 2010), and that recent loanwords from western European languages fitting its phonological profile are instead classed as masculine. I show that this is not the case for earlier loanwords from Turkish. New neuter nouns are still accepted, and when changed, are classed as feminine, not masculine. This follows an attested pattern of assigning gender according to lexical distributions. An account of gender assignment utilizing Optimality Theory and incorporating gradiently-ranked constraints captures this pattern in which rankings can shift over time, thus leading to the observed historical changes in rates of neuter gender assignment.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Foreword & Acknowledgements ix
- Introduction 1
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Part I. Case & argument structure
- Strategies for aligning syntactic roles and case marking with semantic properties 9
- Criteria for subjecthood and non-canonical subjects in Classical Greek 29
- Parallel syncretism in early Indo-European 49
- Dative possessor in ditransitive Spanish predication, in diachronic perspective 65
- ‘Liking’ constructions in Spanish 81
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Part II. Alignment & Diathesis
- The actualization of new voice patterns in Romance 109
- Ergative from passive in Proto-Basque 143
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Part III. Patterns, paradigms, & restructuring
- Synchrony, diachrony, and indexicality 163
- Ablaut pattern extension as partial regularization strategy in German and Luxembourgish 183
- Remotivating inflectional classes 205
- From noun to quantifier 229
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Part IV. Grammaticalization & construction grammar
- Old French si , grammaticalisation, and the interconnectedness of change 253
- The rise of the analytic Perfect aspect in the West Iranian languages 273
- On the grammaticalization of the -(v)ši- resultative in North Slavic 293
- Atomizing linguistic change 317
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Part V. Corpus linguistics & morphosyntax
- The rich get richer 343
- Expletives in Icelandic 363
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Part VI. Languages in contact
- Contact and change in Neo-Aramaic dialects 387
- Copying of argument structure 409
- Contact-induced change and the phonemicization of the vowel /ɑ/ in Quảng Nam Vietnamese 431
- The future markers in Palestinian Arabic: 453
- Neuters to none 473
- Index 489
- Languages & language families 493
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Foreword & Acknowledgements ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Case & argument structure
- Strategies for aligning syntactic roles and case marking with semantic properties 9
- Criteria for subjecthood and non-canonical subjects in Classical Greek 29
- Parallel syncretism in early Indo-European 49
- Dative possessor in ditransitive Spanish predication, in diachronic perspective 65
- ‘Liking’ constructions in Spanish 81
-
Part II. Alignment & Diathesis
- The actualization of new voice patterns in Romance 109
- Ergative from passive in Proto-Basque 143
-
Part III. Patterns, paradigms, & restructuring
- Synchrony, diachrony, and indexicality 163
- Ablaut pattern extension as partial regularization strategy in German and Luxembourgish 183
- Remotivating inflectional classes 205
- From noun to quantifier 229
-
Part IV. Grammaticalization & construction grammar
- Old French si , grammaticalisation, and the interconnectedness of change 253
- The rise of the analytic Perfect aspect in the West Iranian languages 273
- On the grammaticalization of the -(v)ši- resultative in North Slavic 293
- Atomizing linguistic change 317
-
Part V. Corpus linguistics & morphosyntax
- The rich get richer 343
- Expletives in Icelandic 363
-
Part VI. Languages in contact
- Contact and change in Neo-Aramaic dialects 387
- Copying of argument structure 409
- Contact-induced change and the phonemicization of the vowel /ɑ/ in Quảng Nam Vietnamese 431
- The future markers in Palestinian Arabic: 453
- Neuters to none 473
- Index 489
- Languages & language families 493