split-ergative morphology in hindi/urdu, pashto & balochi languages

Authors

mahinnaz mirdehghan

nader jahangiri

abstract

this research is designed to produce detailed descriptions of the morphological ergativity in three south asian languages. the chosen sample includes hindi/urdu, pashto and balochi, as morphologically enough to achieve the goals and generalizations of the research. the study presents the range of variation in case and agreement marking in these south asian descendants of the common indo-iranian language, in which the distinct systems of ergative case marking and agreement is to be compared, both within the nominal and verbal domain. while these individual languages are common examples of morphological ergativity, the range of variation among these languages has not been examined comparatively. the goals of this research are twofold. after a comprehensive overview, we present a detailed typology of ergative marking and agreement in the predetermined languages, demonstrating their common split ergative behavior. this process is manifested in two distinct strategies of markedness: differential case marking (dcm) [including differential subject marking (dsm), as well as differential object marking (dom); aissen 1999] in the nominal domain, and marked agreement in the verbal domain; which is considered within a comparative account. it will be seen that the ergative marking and agreement patterns are not uniform across these languages. the overt morphological expression of case marking occurs of varying degrees in their nominal paradigms, while in the verbal paradigm the ways in which agreement morphology cross references arguments illustrates the common default agreement with the nominative argument in all three systems. the study proceeds as follows. first the range of variation in case and subject (st) marking in the sample will be presented, together with an overview of morphological ergativity. following this, the typological splits, indicating the strategies of markedness and the variation in case marking splits (dcm), including both differential subject marking (dsm) and differential object marking (dom), will be examined through the study. the effect of differential object marking (dom) on verb agreement is considered next; and finally, a summary of the typology of variation in the domain of the study will be presented. noteworthy is that the acheived comparative patterns can be considered as representatives of languages in the indo-iranian family.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

The Ergative System in Balochi from a Typological Perspective

For the Western Iranian languages the transition from the Old Iranian to the Middle-Iranian period is characterised by – among other things – the loss of word-final syllables. This loss had a far-reaching impact on the nominal and verbal systems since it caused the loss of categories which had been expressed by suffixes. The consequences include the emergence of the so-called ergative system. ...

full text

When Ergative = Genitive: Nominals and Split Ergativity

While most Mayan languages show an ergative-absolutive pattern of agreement in all main clauses, Chol shows what has been described as an aspect-based split (Quizar and Knowles-Berry 1988; Vázquez Álvarez 2002; Law et al. 2006): perfective clauses show an ergative-absolutive pattern, as in (1), while non-perfective clauses show what appears to be a nominative-accusative pattern, illustrated in ...

full text

Speech translation for low-resource languages: the case of Pashto

We present a number of challenges and solutions that have arisen in the development of a speech translation system for American English and Pashto, highlighting those specific to a very low resource language. In particular, we address issues posed by Pashto in the areas of written representation, corpus creation, speech recognition, speech synthesis, and grammar development for translation.

full text

the ergative system in balochi from a typological perspective

for the western iranian languages the transition from the old iranian to the middle-iranian period is characterised by – among other things – the loss of word-final syllables. this loss had a far-reaching impact on the nominal and verbal systems since it caused the loss of categories which had been expressed by suffixes. the consequences include the emergence of the so-called ergative system. ...

full text

Impersonal Constructions in Balochi

Impersonal constructions are interesting from a typological perspective. Siewierska (2008: 3–4) finds that “[t]he semantic characterizations of impersonality centre on two notions”, either “the lack of a human agent controlling the depicted situation or event” or “situations or events which may be brought about by a human agent but crucially one which is not specified.” The present article focu...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
the international journal of humanities

Publisher: tarbiat modarres university

ISSN 1735-5060

volume 12

issue 3 2005

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023