I think when you've got an overt complementiser, it's usually on the same side of the clause as the verb is. But there've got to be exceptions, so maybe it doesn't matter. (I know I've seen this pattern given as an explanation of why Mandarin doesn't let embedded questions---which follow the verb---use the clause-final complementiser ma 嗎, fwiw.)
Is your ergative case the same in form as, say, an instrumental? That'd be one way to make sense of your case-marking pattern with nominalisations. (From what you say it can't be the same as your genitive, I guess.)
My gut wants to say that nominalisations tend to be factive. I mean, if I say, "I'll cause your doing it," I'm presupposing that you'll do it; whereas if I say, "I'll cause you to do it," I'm implying that you'll do it, but not actually presupposing that. But maybe nominalisations don't work that way in all languages.
That generalisation seems like it must have exceptions.bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Jan 27, 2020 7:01 am [*] Noonan states that ‘all languages have some sort of reduced complement type in opposition to the indicative’. But what exactly is a ‘reduced complement type’? Noonan defines it fairly straightforwardly as ‘any complement type that has fewer syntactic and inflectional possibilities than an indicative main clause’, but then never refers to this definition again and keeps on talking about ‘grammatical relations’, whatever those are.
A reduced complement type would be a subjunctive or a nominalisation or something---anything without independent time reference would count.
Grammatical relations (as that expression is usually used) are whatever subject and object are.
I think the issue for your language wouldn't be case-marking on the complement clause, it'd be ergative marking on the subject of the main clause. But to answer the question: you'd be safe treating verbs with clausal complements as intransitive, but there are certainly languages that treat them as transitive.[*] Should my s-type complement clause take case marking? Or is this a special case where languages usually omit case?
Yes. As I implied above, I suspect it's safest to think of the ergative case-marking on the subject of a nominalisation as distinct from the ergative case-marking on the subject of a clause.[*] For my nominalization construction, since the absolutive argument is marked as a possessor, I have a situation where there appears to be an ergative argument but no absolutive argument. Is this realistic?
Your s-type complements have independent time reference, which suggests it'll be possible to mark them for tense. Your nominalisations don't have independent time reference, so they could easily do without separate tense marking. It certainly makes it seem like they could be more restricted than the s-type ones.[*] Out of the two complement clause types I have described, I want one to have a restricted range of tense/aspect combinations available (which I’ve heard is pretty normal in complement clauses). For which clause type is this most plausible? What sort of restriction should I use? (I suspect the answer to this is in that Dixon article I keep on talking about — maybe I’ll check it later when I have more time.)
Also, from the fact that the object of a nominalised verb can't take regular absolutive case, this makes it seem like it's a fairly 'small' nominalisation, and that it shouldn't be possible for it to include tense. (This is a pretty theory-laden judgment, so feel free to disregard. The idea is that to include tense, a nominalisation must be 'higher' than TP, and anything that includes TP is big enough that there shouldn't be anything stopping the verb's object from getting absolutive case.)
I hope that makes sense, and is reasonable.