Vardelm wrote: ↑Sun Jul 05, 2020 4:40 pmBased on the link Ars Lande provided, plus some more looking this afternoon, it appears that Haida, Maidu, Arabana, Klamath, and Tlingit are examples where pronouns appear in free form as opposed to bound to the verb. I don't know to what extent each of those is "prototypical" polysynthetic. I think if I follow some examples there and (if needed) add in more noun incorporation, I'll be within the general ball park. I'm not fussy about matching an exact definition of polysynthetic, but it helps to know what the range of natural options are.
Frislander wrote: ↑Tue Jul 07, 2020 11:00 amand when people have tried to come up with a consistent definition for what [polysynthesis] is it's always ended up excluding languages which pretty much everyone would agree "feel polysynthetic", like requiring noun-incorporation and thereby excluding Eskimo-Aleut, or requiring polypersonalism and thereby excluding Nuu-Chah-Nulth, and so on.
Oh, that's great guys. I didn't (and haven't) read Ars Lande's link because I'm sure it goes to a recent linguistics books, and I try to avoid Google Books reserving it instead to those moments where I absolutely need to get a passage in a rather unavailable copyrighted book, because of view limits.
Vardelm wrote: ↑Mon Jul 06, 2020 5:17 pmPabappa wrote: ↑Mon Jul 06, 2020 10:15 amAll of these posts so far have addressed traditional object incorporation, but i still want to see example of subject incorporation when you develop the language to the point where you can show examples. i imagine this will be much moire difficult which is why i am so interested in it.
It may well not be feasiable. I freely admit I don't really know WTF I'm doing with incorporation, so this might be like watching a conlang trainwreck. I'll post whatever I come up with though, so feel free to drop in, point, & laugh.
Subject incorporation is attested in many languages. The thing is that it's nearly only attested with unaccusative verbs, that is, verbs whose subjects lack control or are patient-like or are inanimate, and even the extremely rare examples of incorporated [+control] animate subjects still don't involve humans or spirits, but animals, so still "inanimate" to the extent they're irrational. Some examples:
我頭痛。wǒ tóutòng [Mandarin]
1SG head-hurt
'My head hurts.' (bradrn's abstract example in page one)
You can tell this involves an incorporated subject because (1) 痛 tòng also exists as a clearly intransitive verb meaning 'hurt' (很痛喲!hěn tòng yo! 'It hurts!'), (2) Mandarin has SAdvV order for degree adverbs and here they appear before 頭 tóu 'head' (我很頭痛 wǒ hěn tóutòng 'my head hurts a lot', lit. "1SG very head-hurt"), and (3) the moment you use an un-incorporatable disyllabic noun or a modified monosyllabic one then degree adverbs can't go in that position anymore, as Mandarin mostly incorporates only monosyllabic nouns into verbs (我眼睛痛 wǒ yǎnjing tòng 'my eyes hurt', ungrammatical *我很眼睛痛 wǒ hěn yǎnjing tòng with intended meaning 'my eyes hurt a lot', grammatical 我眼睛很痛 wǒ yǎnjing hěn tòng). Although I
guess you could still argue this involves an incorporated locative... Anyway, to continue onto more examples:
kǫ́ 'fire' [Hare North Slavey, Rice 1991: 55]
gozhíkǫ́dawé
go-zhí--kǫ́-da-wé
area-into--fire-(inflection)-happen
'A forest fire is starting.' (lit. "It nearby-fire-happens.")
ətləg-in ətlˀa wˀi-gˀi [Chukchi, Spencer 1995: 450, citing Polinskaja and Nedjalkov 1987: 259]
father-GEN mother.ABS die-3SG.INTR
'My father's mother died.'
ətləg-ən ətlˀa-wˀe-gˀe
father-ABS mother-die-3SG.INTR
'My father's mother died on him.' (lit. "Father mother-died.")
Notice the vowel harmony effect of the incorporated ətlˀa- in the second sentence.
ko 'vomit (noun)' [Ahtna, Rice 2008: 381]
ti-ko-si-ni-ɬ-taen
out-vomit-1SG.DO-(aspect)-causative-lie.SG.ANIM
'I went out to vomit.' (lit. "Vomit-made-lie-me out.", with ""animate""
vomit inside the verb)
tsula 'tongue' [Ahtna, Rice 2008: 384]
de-zaa ts’a-na-tsula-l-tses
REFL-mouth (adverb)-ITERATIVE-tongue-(voice)-move.flexible.thing
'His tongue goes in and out of his mouth.'
Notice how the iterative aspect of 'move [flexible thing]' appears before the incorporated noun.
ɬi- [Ahtna, Rice 2008: 382]
'dog' (word root)
ɬi-y-az-’aɬ
dog-3DO-(aspect)-bite
'A dog bit him/her once.' (lit. "Dog-bit-her.")
Rice notes she only finds this incorporation of an animate in control for the noun 'dog'.
- Rice, Keren. 1991. "Intransitives in Slave." In:
International Journal of American Linguistics. Vol. 57, no. 1 (January), pp. 51-69. Pub.: University of Chicago Press.
- Rice, Keren. 2008. "On incorporation in Athapaskan languages". In:
Grammatical Change and Linguistic Theory: The Rosendal Papers. Ed.: Thórhallur Eythórsson. Pub.: John Benjamins.
- Spencer, Andrew. 1995. "Incorporation in Chukchi." In:
Language. Vol. 71, no. 3 (September), pp. 439-489. Pub: Linguistic Society of America.
As cited by Spencer:
- Polinskaja, Maria; Nedjalkov, Vladimir P. 1987. "Contrasting the absolutive in Chukchee."
Lingua. Vol. 71, pp. 239-269.
(I would've liked to add a Coptic example of this, since this is also found there, but I've run out of time to write this post.)