The typology of semantic alignment / edited by Mark Donohue and Søren Wichmann.

Leading scholars explore the characteristics of languages with semantic alignment systems and compare the structure of languages with and without them, with special reference to Eurasia, the Americas, and the south-west Pacific, where semantically aligned languages are concentrated.

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Donohue, Mark, 1967-, Wichmann, Søren, 1964-
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Oxford, UK : Oxford University Press, 2008.
Series:Oxford linguistics.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Table of Contents:
  • The study of semantic alignment / Soren Wichmann
  • Semantic alignment systems / Mark Donohue
  • Split intransitives, experiencer objects, and transimpersonal constructions / Andrej Malchukov
  • Thematic roles, event structure, and argument encoding in semantically aligned languages / Peter M. Arkadiev
  • Why are stative-active languages rare in Eurasia? / Johanna Nichols
  • Losing semantic alignment / Edward J. Vajda
  • Intransitive split in tundra nenets, or how much semantics can hide behind syntactic alignment / Olesya Khanina
  • From ergative case marking to semantic case marking / Gontzal Aldai
  • The semantics of semantic alignment in eastern Indonesia / Marian Klamer
  • The rise and fall of semantic alignment in North Halmahera, Indonesia / Gary Holton
  • Verb classification in Amis / Naomi Tsukida
  • The emergence of agentive systems in core argument marking / Marianne Mithun
  • Argument dereferentialization in Lakhota / Regina Pustet and David Rood
  • The emergence of active/stative alignment in Otomi / Enrique L. Palancar
  • Voice and transitivity in Guarani / Maura Velazquez-Castillo
  • Agreement in two Arawak languages / Swintha Danielsen and Tania Granadillo
  • Affectedness and viewpoint in Pilaga (Guaykuruan) / Alejandra Vidal.