Abstract
This paper examines the phenomenon of lability in Estonian. We describe the types of lability found in our database and the distribution of verbs according to formal (derivational) and semantic verb classes, and we propose an explanation for the spread of lability in the Estonian verbal lexicon. Estonian displays a wealth of labile verbs, compared with Finnish, for instance, a closely related language which uses similar (derivational and morphosyntactic) valency changing devices. We argue that Estonian lability has been co-conditioned by the following factors: a) intensive contact with German, a language rich in labile verbs, b) fluctuations in the productivity and regularity of the valency-decreasing derivation in the recent history of Estonian, c) the phonetic merger of different derivational suffixes leading to misinterpretation of the valency patterns of their derivatives, and d) form-driven analogy. In relation to the last factor we introduce the notion of “clustered lability,” which designates the expansion of the labile pattern over verbs sharing the same root.
©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