Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order

In this paper I propose and motivate a syntactic analysis of Hixkaryana (a Carib language spoken in the Amazon in Brazil), drawing on the extensive, linguistically-informed fieldwork of Desmond C. Derbyshire (1979, 1985, inter alia). Hixkaryana displays basic/unmarked Object Verb Subject (OVS) word...

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Main Author: Kalin, Laura
Other Authors: University of California, Los Angeles
Language:en_US
Published: University of Arizona Linguistics Circle 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/253418
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2534182015-10-23T04:57:43Z Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order Kalin, Laura University of California, Los Angeles In this paper I propose and motivate a syntactic analysis of Hixkaryana (a Carib language spoken in the Amazon in Brazil), drawing on the extensive, linguistically-informed fieldwork of Desmond C. Derbyshire (1979, 1985, inter alia). Hixkaryana displays basic/unmarked Object Verb Subject (OVS) word order, which is found in very few languages of the world (Dryer 2008). There are three main components to the proposal presented here. I argue that the syntax of Hixkaryana involves (i) a marked hierarchy of agreement projections, AgrO over AgrS; (ii) movement of the subject to a high topic position; and (iii) fronting of the rest of the clause over the subject. This analysis accounts for a constellation of properties in Hixkaryana, including the surface order of constituents (OVSX, where X is an adjunct PP or AP), surface constituency (the object and verb form a constituent exclusive of the subject), verbal morphology (agreement is a prefix while all other inflectional affixes are suffixes), structural relations (the subject c-commands the object and obliques/adjuncts), the position of particles (which are either in second position or invariantly post-verbal), and exceptional OSV word order (triggered by the first person exclusive pronoun amna). OVS languages, like Hixkaryana, are important for syntactic theory because they likely have special insights to contribute, given how rare they are; however, OVS languages receive very little attention in the literature. This paper aims to call attention to OVS word order as a real linguistic phenomenon that must be accounted for in mainstream linguistic theory. 2012 Article text 0894-4539 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/253418 Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics, Linguistic Theory at the University of Arizona en_US University of Arizona Linguistics Circle
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description In this paper I propose and motivate a syntactic analysis of Hixkaryana (a Carib language spoken in the Amazon in Brazil), drawing on the extensive, linguistically-informed fieldwork of Desmond C. Derbyshire (1979, 1985, inter alia). Hixkaryana displays basic/unmarked Object Verb Subject (OVS) word order, which is found in very few languages of the world (Dryer 2008). There are three main components to the proposal presented here. I argue that the syntax of Hixkaryana involves (i) a marked hierarchy of agreement projections, AgrO over AgrS; (ii) movement of the subject to a high topic position; and (iii) fronting of the rest of the clause over the subject. This analysis accounts for a constellation of properties in Hixkaryana, including the surface order of constituents (OVSX, where X is an adjunct PP or AP), surface constituency (the object and verb form a constituent exclusive of the subject), verbal morphology (agreement is a prefix while all other inflectional affixes are suffixes), structural relations (the subject c-commands the object and obliques/adjuncts), the position of particles (which are either in second position or invariantly post-verbal), and exceptional OSV word order (triggered by the first person exclusive pronoun amna). OVS languages, like Hixkaryana, are important for syntactic theory because they likely have special insights to contribute, given how rare they are; however, OVS languages receive very little attention in the literature. This paper aims to call attention to OVS word order as a real linguistic phenomenon that must be accounted for in mainstream linguistic theory.
author2 University of California, Los Angeles
author_facet University of California, Los Angeles
Kalin, Laura
author Kalin, Laura
spellingShingle Kalin, Laura
Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order
author_sort Kalin, Laura
title Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order
title_short Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order
title_full Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order
title_fullStr Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order
title_full_unstemmed Hixkaryana: The Syntax of Object Verb Subject Word Order
title_sort hixkaryana: the syntax of object verb subject word order
publisher University of Arizona Linguistics Circle
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/253418
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