LINGUIST List 36.396

Thu Jan 30 2025

Books: Post-predicate elements in the Western Asian Transition Zone: Haig, Rasekh-Mahand, Stilo, Schreiber and Schiborr (eds.) (2024)

Editor for this issue: Joel Jenkins <joellinguistlist.org>



Date: 30-Jan-2025
From: Sebastian Nordhoff <sebastian.nordhofflangsci-press.org>
Subject: Post-predicate elements in the Western Asian Transition Zone: Haig, Rasekh-Mahand, Stilo, Schreiber and Schiborr (eds.) (2024)
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Title: Post-predicate elements in the Western Asian Transition Zone
Subtitle: A corpus-based approach to areal typology
Series Title: Contact and Multilingualism
Publication Year: 2024

Publisher: Language Science Press
http://langsci-press.org
Book URL: https://langsci-press.org/catalog/book/395

Editor(s): Geoffrey Haig, Mohammad Rasekh-Mahand, Donald Stilo, Laurentia Schreiber, Nils Schiborr

eBook

Abstract:

This volume explores word-order phenomena across a phylogenetically diverse sample of languages covering a region loosely referred to as the Western Asian Transition Zone, approximately corresponding to western Iran, northern Iraq, eastern Turkey and the Caucasus. The sample includes representatives from four branches of Indo-European (Iranian, Hellenic, Armenian, Indo-Aryan) as well as Turkic, Semitic, Kartvelian, Northwest Caucasian and Northeast Caucasian. Methodologically, we apply a corpus-based approach to word-order, building on two purpose-built and fully accessible data-bases of spoken language corpora, WOWA (Word Order in Western Asia), and HamBam (Hamedan-Bamberg Corpus of Contemporary Spoken Persian). The majority of the languages are historically OV, yet exhibit high rates of post-verbal elements, and these constitute the primary focus of the volume. One of the major findings is the importance of semantic role in determining pre- versus post-verbal placement of clausal constituents: We identify a consistent bias towards post-verbal placement of spatial Goals, which is amplified by increasing areal proximity to the VO languages of the southwestern periphery of the region (Semitic). In the languages in and adjacent to the Caucasus, on the other hand, we find stronger effects of information structure in triggering post-verbal position. Along with contributions on individual languages and varieties, the volume includes an overview chapter outlining the theoretical background and the data sources, summary chapters on sub-regions, as well as contributions from an experimental and psycholinguistic perspective.

Linguistic Field(s): Syntax

Language Family(ies): Asian Unclassified

Written In: English (eng)




Page Updated: 29-Jan-2025


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