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Re: ergative? I don't know...

From:Mathias M. Lassailly <lassailly@...>
Date:Monday, October 26, 1998, 17:02
>David G. Durand wrote: > >> A, S, P together: rare system, no case or dependable syntactic marking of > >> argument roles. I've never seen examples of this, but it's claimed to > >> exist, and depends heavily on context or paraphrase to distinguish agent > >> and patient. > >
I may be off the topic, but Ainu has some features that - I think - are of some interest regarding that question. As you know perhaps Ainu - like old Japanese - is SOV - and sometime OSV - with no core case-tags AND personal possessive affixes are the same as the transitive subject marking affixes. That's what my professors would call an 'attributive' case when the attribute is predicate. However, it's not an holophrastic language. Had it be so classified I'm sure some linguists would say that the transitive subject marking affixes are the same as the ergative pronouns affixed to the predicate ;-) I'm (almost) kidding. The point is that there are no 'accusative' personal possessive affixes BUT when you compare accusative affixes with transitive subject affixes, well, only the 1st person is different and the 1st person-affix is often omitted so most of the time only position of words shows who's the 'subject' except when the position is OSV :-) (I can't help smiling while writing this). And 'applicative' is heavily used to 'di-transitivize' (sorry) verbs and make substantives :-) [snipped but saved] Mathias ----- See the original message at http://www.egroups.com/list/conlang/?start=17754 -- Free e-mail group hosting at http://www.eGroups.com/