alice wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 1:07 pm
vegfarandi wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 11:14 amBut yes, what you said about OP's thing being a tendency, that is probably true. But it is definitely not a universal.
Possibly a universal tendency?
Hm… personally I don't believe in the Chomskyan idea of a Universal Grammar and therefore I'm not sure what "universal" would imply other than being part of UG. I personally subscribe to the idea that cross-linguistic tendencies occur as a byproduct of languages attempting to operate in the most efficient, clear manner.
Take for example the idea of
differential object marking (DOM). DOM is the term used to describe when objects of verbs are differentially marked based on some semantic property. A well-known instance of this is Spanish, which requires the preposition
a with sentient direct objects:
- Pedro tocó la foto 'Pedro touched the photo'
- Pedro tocó a María 'Pedro touched María'
The reason this kind of a feature has developed in multiple languages around the world is most likely because sentient things are more likely to be subjects as sentient things are able to intentionally do things and the lower you go on the animacy scale, the less like the thing is to be able to do something. So the sentient argument being an object is out of the ordinary and you may want to bring that to the attention of the listener. Spaish also allows the movement of the subject to the end of a clause:
So a second reason exists within Spanish for the development of this feature: it clarifies that a sentient object is not a displaced subject.
If there is in fact a tendency for more marked categories to distinguish fewer additional categories than less marked categories (having not done or seen comparative research on this I don't want to definitively say there is), I can see three explanations, none of which involve UG:
- A marked category might occur less commonly than the unmarked one and due to it already being "remarkable" due to its expecit marker there's less pragmatic need for further marking as the listener is more likely to pay attention to it given it is marked (cognitive hypothesis)
- Multiple morphological markers could be more subject to phonological erosion over time than unmarked roots (diachronic hypothesis)
- A language may be limited in the available number of marker slots with one category superseding others (morphosyntactic hypothesis)
Any or all of these could be factors leading to a general tendency for what you described.
Personally, I'm averse to call anything in linguistics "universal" unless you're using it in the
Greenbergian sense of a "language universal" which is what you can call a "tendency" of correlated features A+B that it occurs in 90%+ plus languages that have A be true. I think the above is far from rising to that level.