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Theories of Morphological Case and Topic/Focus

171,19 €*

Dieses Produkt erscheint am 28. Juni 2025

Produktnummer: 18492c4c762d234639a50d05b41a26e692
Themengebiete: abstract case adjacency condition generative syntax language contact language variation linguistic typology micro-variations split ergativity topic-prominence vs. subject-prominence
Veröffentlichungsdatum: 28.06.2025
EAN: 9783031683145
Sprache: Englisch
Seitenzahl: 417
Produktart: Gebunden
Herausgeber: Ogawa, Yoshiki
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Untertitel: Synchronic Variation and Diachronic Change in Japanese and Beyond
Produktinformationen "Theories of Morphological Case and Topic/Focus"
This edited book brings together studies on morphological case in Japanese, English, and Bantu languages, among others, from morphosyntactic, semantic and historical perspectives. Languages are divided into two types in terms of case: nominative-accusative languages and ergative-absolutive languages. Even if we limit our attention to nominative-accusative languages, morphological case on subjects and objects can vary across languages or even within a single language, either synchronically or diachronically. For instance, certain stative predicates in Japanese allow their subjects and objects to be marked with dative and nominative case, respectively, and subjects in adnominal clauses in Japanese can be marked with genitive case; moreover, genitive subject marking in adnominal clauses has decreased over the past few centuries. Licensing relationships between predicates and cases can also have idiolectal, dialectal, and/or geographical micro-variations and intergenerational and/or diachronic micro-change. This book draws parallels and examines differences between examples of European, Asian and African languages, and discusses whether and how licensing of certain morphological cases (especially, subject marking)  is related to the grammatical functions such as Topic and Focus. It will be of interest to researchers in Theoretical Linguistics, particularly those involved with Language Variation and Change, Linguistic Typology, Morphology and Syntax, and Generative Grammar.

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