
This is the first comprehensive treatment of the strategies employed in the world's languages to express predicative possession, as in "the boy has a bat". It presents the results of the author's fifteen-year research project on the subject. Predicative possession is the source of many grammaticalization paths - as in the English perfect tense formed from to have - and its typology is an important key to understanding the structural variety of the world's languages and how they change. Drawing on data from some 400 languages representing all the world's language families, most of which lack a close equivalent to the verb to have, Professor Stassen aims (a) to establish a typology of four basic types of predicative possession, (b) to discover and describe the processes by which standard constructions can be modified, and (c) to explore links between the typology of predicative possession and other typologies in order to reveal patterns of interdependence. He shows, for example, that the parameter of simultaneous sequencing - the way a language formally encodes a sequence like "John sang and Mary danced" - correlates with the way it encodes predicative possession. By means of this and other links the author sets up a single universal model in order to account for all morphosyntactic variation in predicative possession found in the languages of the world, including patterns of variation over time. Predicative Possession will interest scholars and advanced students of language typology, diachronic linguistics, morphology and syntax.
This work investigates the cross-linguistic strategies used to express predicative possession, seeking to establish a universal model for the morphosyntactic variation found in the world's languages. Leon Stassen, a professor of linguistics, synthesizes fifteen years of research to categorize the diverse ways languages handle possessive constructions. By analyzing data from approximately 400 languages, he argues that these constructions are central to understanding grammaticalization paths and structural change. The book proposes a typology of four basic types of predicative possession and explores their correlations with other linguistic parameters.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a foundational text in the field of linguistic typology due to its extensive cross-linguistic data set. Readers frequently note the high academic density of the prose, which is intended for scholars and advanced students of syntax and morphology.
Page Count:
640
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191568147
ISBN-13:
9780191568145
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