Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik Animacy as a prominence-lending feature in Lakurumau morphosyntax and discourse
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

Animacy as a prominence-lending feature in Lakurumau morphosyntax and discourse

  • Lidia Federica Mazzitelli
Veröffentlichen auch Sie bei De Gruyter Brill
Prominence in Austronesian
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Prominence in Austronesian

Abstract

This chapter presents a corpus-based investigation on the role of animacy as a determiner of prominence status in the morphosyntax and discourse of Lakurumau, a Western Oceanic language of Papua New Guinea. Following Himmelmann & Primus (2015), I define prominence as a relational property, which singles out one element from a set of elements of equal type and structure; prominent elements are structural attractors, that is, they may license more operations than their competitors. I show that Lakurumau human and animate referents often behave as structural attractors, being able to license more morphosyntactic operations than their inanimate counterparts: for instance, only animate referents trigger number agreement on the predicate; in discourse, human referents are much more likely to be encoded as transitive subjects (the most prominent syntactic role) than animate and inanimate ones. The Lakurumau data confirm established cross-linguistic tendencies and contribute to a better understanding of the role of animacy in the grammar and discourse of Oceanic languages.

Abstract

This chapter presents a corpus-based investigation on the role of animacy as a determiner of prominence status in the morphosyntax and discourse of Lakurumau, a Western Oceanic language of Papua New Guinea. Following Himmelmann & Primus (2015), I define prominence as a relational property, which singles out one element from a set of elements of equal type and structure; prominent elements are structural attractors, that is, they may license more operations than their competitors. I show that Lakurumau human and animate referents often behave as structural attractors, being able to license more morphosyntactic operations than their inanimate counterparts: for instance, only animate referents trigger number agreement on the predicate; in discourse, human referents are much more likely to be encoded as transitive subjects (the most prominent syntactic role) than animate and inanimate ones. The Lakurumau data confirm established cross-linguistic tendencies and contribute to a better understanding of the role of animacy in the grammar and discourse of Oceanic languages.

Heruntergeladen am 1.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110730753-010/html?lang=de
Button zum nach oben scrollen