bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Mar 27, 2026 7:25 am
Plenty of languages alternate between V1 and V2 word orders. (I already mentioned Dinka; Mayan languages do it too, and in fact allow fronting of
both constituents at once.) I couldn’t care less about what theories the Chomskyanists have come up with to contort these languages into the shape of English.
Sure, I chose V1 because I consider the
what (i.e. the action) to be more important and prominent than the
who, and maybe my speakers do as well.
Still, I've noticed that most, if not nearly all, of the languages I know of that have V1 order either have polypersonal marking or have object clitics, neither which Vrkhazhian has. So maybe those things are something that allows them to defy the proposed "verb-object bonding" principle.
Ultimately, It all depends on whether one should consider the verb and object as one unit separate from the subject (seems to be the case for most languages, leading to the "verb-object bonding" principle) or if only the verb is the main unit to which subject and object are equally subordinate.
Relatedly:
https://linguistics.stackexchange.com/q ... evelopment