Abstract
The study of P-lability in languages in which the relationship between transitive and intransitive predication can be characterized as radical P-alignment must take into account the formal distinction between weak and strong lability, and the semantic distinction between argument structure modifying and argument structure preserving lability. Radical P-alignment is particularly common among Daghestanian languages in which some authors operating with a loose definition of P-lability have argued that P-lability is pervasive, whereas others have argued that, in the same languages, P-lability is exceptional. On the basis of more precise definitions, it is shown that, in the languages in question, all transitive verbs exhibit a behavior whose characterization as a type of lability may be controversial, depending on the definition of lability, whereas some of them only show a behavior that stands closer to prototypical lability. This paper argues that the observation of causativization is particularly relevant to the analysis of lability in such languages.
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- The problem with internally caused change-of-state verbs
- P-lability and radical P-alignment
- Labile verbs in Late Latin
- The persistence of labile verbs in the French causative-anticausative alternation
- On the relation between labilizations and neuter gender: Evidence from the Greek diachrony
- The lure of lability: A synchronic and diachronic investigation of the labile pattern in Estonian
- Direct and indirect evidence for lability in Middle Indo-Aryan
- The decline of labile syntax in Old Indo-Aryan: A diachronic typological perspective
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- The problem with internally caused change-of-state verbs
- P-lability and radical P-alignment
- Labile verbs in Late Latin
- The persistence of labile verbs in the French causative-anticausative alternation
- On the relation between labilizations and neuter gender: Evidence from the Greek diachrony
- The lure of lability: A synchronic and diachronic investigation of the labile pattern in Estonian
- Direct and indirect evidence for lability in Middle Indo-Aryan
- The decline of labile syntax in Old Indo-Aryan: A diachronic typological perspective