Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik 20 At the intersection of associated motion, direction and exchoative aspect in the Koman languages
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20 At the intersection of associated motion, direction and exchoative aspect in the Koman languages

  • Manuel A. Otero
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Associated Motion
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Associated Motion

Abstract

The living Koman languages of the Ethiopia-Sudan borderlands all display Deictic Directional (dd) verb morphology which, when occurring on verbs of distinct semantic classes, can express three main conceptual categories. Associated motion is expressed on dynamic verbs that do not contain motion in their inherent semantics, (deictic) direction is expressed on translational motion verbs, and exchoative aspect, or the “exiting from a state”, a heretofore cross- linguistically unattested category, entails that the state expressed by the verb no longer holds. This paper examines the Koman dd system in light of current associated motion typologies and through the lens of a motion event. While the function of a particular dd morpheme can generally be predicted by the semantic class of verb on which it occurs, an examination of lower-lever semantic verb classes reveals that alternate construals of events and states can lead to the expression of more than one conceptual category.

Abstract

The living Koman languages of the Ethiopia-Sudan borderlands all display Deictic Directional (dd) verb morphology which, when occurring on verbs of distinct semantic classes, can express three main conceptual categories. Associated motion is expressed on dynamic verbs that do not contain motion in their inherent semantics, (deictic) direction is expressed on translational motion verbs, and exchoative aspect, or the “exiting from a state”, a heretofore cross- linguistically unattested category, entails that the state expressed by the verb no longer holds. This paper examines the Koman dd system in light of current associated motion typologies and through the lens of a motion event. While the function of a particular dd morpheme can generally be predicted by the semantic class of verb on which it occurs, an examination of lower-lever semantic verb classes reveals that alternate construals of events and states can lead to the expression of more than one conceptual category.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. Part I: Perspectives and general issues
  4. 1 Introduction: associated motion as a grammatical category in linguistic typology 3
  5. 2 A cross-linguistic survey of Associated Motion and Directionals 31
  6. 3 Serial verb constructions and motion semantics 87
  7. 4 Associated motion and directionals: where they overlap 129
  8. 5 Deictic directionality as associated motion: motion, complex events and event integration in African languages 163
  9. 6 A visual stimulus for eliciting associated motion 201
  10. Part II: Australia and South Pacific
  11. 7 Associated motion in the Pama-Nyungan languages of Australia 231
  12. 8 Mudburra associated motion in an areal perspective 325
  13. 9 “Now the story’s turning around”: Associated motion and directionality in Ende, a language of Papua New Guinea 357
  14. 10 Preverbal directionals as markers of associated motion in Paluai (Austronesian; Oceanic) 385
  15. Part III: The Americas
  16. 11 Associated motion in Chácobo (Pano) in typological perspective 419
  17. 12 Pilagá directionals and the typology of associated motion 451
  18. 13 Associated motion in North America (including Mexico and Central America) 485
  19. 14 Associated motion in the Otomi family 527
  20. Part IV: Africa
  21. 15 Associated motion in Bantu languages 569
  22. 16 Associated motion and deictic directional in Atlantic languages 611
  23. 17 Ventive, associated motion and aspect in Jóola Fóoñi (Atlantic) 665
  24. 18 The extension of associated motion to direction, aspect and argument structure in Nilotic languages 695
  25. 19 The ‘along’–deictic-directional verb suffix complex in Kupsapiny 747
  26. 20 At the intersection of associated motion, direction and exchoative aspect in the Koman languages 779
  27. Part V: Asia
  28. 21 Associated motion in Sino-Tibetan, with a focus on Gyalrongic and Kiranti 819
  29. 22 Associated motion in Tungusic languages: a case of mixed argument structure 855
  30. Subject Index 899
  31. Language Index 907
  32. Name Index 917
Heruntergeladen am 1.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110692099-020/html?lang=de
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