
The essays collected in this volume address a curious and little-known agreement pattern. It consists of a nominal that is case marked for its own grammatical relation, typically that of an attribute in a possessive construction taking another case in agreement with the nominal it is in construction withschematically "in-the-palace in-the-king's." Such double case marking, termed Suffixaufnahme when first noted, is cross-linguistically rare and intriguingly distributed. Offering in-depth descriptions of all the core cases of Suffixaufnahme and of a variety of less prototypical ones, these essays highlight the considerable significance of this pattern for linguistic theory. Ostensibly marginal, Suffixaufnahme bears on several fundamental issues in syntax and morphology. It exemplifies unusual case marking and agreement, and it throws light on the word-class distinction between nouns and adjectives, the difference between inflection and derivation, the nature of grammatical relations (especially those of attribution and apposition), and the hierarchical nature of syntax.
This volume investigates the rare and complex linguistic phenomenon of Suffixaufnahme, a double case marking pattern where a nominal receives case markers for both its own grammatical relation and that of its head noun. Frans Plank, a prominent linguist, compiles a series of essays that analyze this pattern across various languages to determine its implications for morphological and syntactic theory. By examining both prototypical and marginal instances of double case, the text argues that this seemingly anomalous feature provides critical insights into the fundamental structures of human language.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this collection as a foundational resource for understanding the mechanics of case marking and agreement in typological linguistics. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is tailored specifically for researchers and advanced students of linguistic theory.
Page Count:
520
Publication Date:
1995-06-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195087755
ISBN-13:
9780195087758
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