Trask and Millar’s Historical Linguistics (which I’m reading now) has an interesting example: Jean, il l’a achetée, la bagnole. Now, I don’t know French, but to me this certainly looks like an example of polypersonal agreement.Ser wrote: ↑Sat Jul 25, 2020 12:22 pm Fun thing: a few months ago I had a small argument/discussion with zompist because he also holds this idea that a language can be said to have object agreement if object pronouns (nearly) always appear to replace an absent NP. And of course, we were discussing French. …
Don’t know about Polynesian, but Oceanic languages in general have lots of pronominal clitics, which essentially act as reduced pronouns. The subject clitics have gone a bit further and are basically agremeent markers now, but the object clitics still act as reduced pronouns. An example from NE Ambae:While I agree that in Mandarin and Cantonese it's more likely due to pronouncing most syllables with basically equal stress (aside from a few grammatical function words/affixes and the noun-marking suffixes of Mandarin), I wonder if there isn't some truth to what bradrn said. Japanese has simple phonotactics and yet it has heavily-stressed personal pronouns (part of what makes them noun-like, regarding the other thread). Does anyone know what typically happens in Polynesian and Bantu languages? It wouldn't surprise me if in both families pronouns tend to be fully stressed too (not counting the polypersonal agreement prefixes of Bantu verbs).
- Langi
- wind
- mo
- REAL
- here-gi=eu
- blow-APPL=1s.O
- Langi
- wind
- mo
- REAL
- here-gi
- blow-APPL
- i
- PERS
- neu
- 1s
- *Langi
- wind
- mo
- REAL
- here-gi=eu
- blow-APPL=1s.O
- i
- PERS
- neu
- 1s
The wind was blowing on me.