bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 5:22 pm
WeepingElf wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 11:38 am
The closest to a language with active-stative alignment expressed by case marking I am aware of is Georgian.
Batsbi is straightforwardly active-stative with case-marking. There’s also a bunch of supposedly ‘ergative’ languages which really have some form of active-stative alignment: most prominently Basque and Tibetan. (You could even argue that it’s
because those ones use case-marking that they often aren’t called ‘active-stative’.)
Yes. These languages are usually considered ergative with some irregularities, but Batsbi even seems to be fluid-S. I don't know any of these languages well enough to say much about them, though. And there is some evidence that Early PIE may also have been an active-stative language of this kind, but this is very uncertain (though I explore this possibility in my Hesperic languages, specifically the Albic ones). Hittite has a split between accusative marking on animate nouns and ergative marking on inanimate ones, though the ergative case is quite clearly an innovation; but other IE languages have, as is well known, a nominative/accusative syncretism on neuter nouns, and many of them tend to avoid neuter transitive subjects. Also, there are two sets of personal endings which appear to have been associated with active and stative subjects, respectively, at an early stage. All of this may be explained by an active-stative alignment in Early PIE or Pre-PIE.
The existence of these languages shows that active-stative alignment
can be expressed by case marking, so the former CONLANG list member I had that beef with was wrong - or rather, we were talking about
different kinds of active-stative languages.
This rareness of active-stative case systems is certainly the reason why there are no generally accepted naming conventions for such cases […]
I’d say ‘nominative’ and ‘absolutive’ are quite standard choices. In languages where active situations are considered uncommon, the former has often been called ‘agentive’ (especially in Sino-Tibetan), or even ‘ergative’.
Fair.
Ahzoh wrote: ↑Mon Jan 29, 2024 2:39 pm
This whole topic just demonstrates my anxiety towards anything involving alignments that aren't Nom-Acc. It requires so much thinking and considerations of minute aspects that I otherwise wouldn't have to think too hard about if I stuck to vanilla Nom-Acc.
Not really, you just have to learn how to reason about them. This is why I wrote a
thread about alignment systems — it’s not perfect, but I’ll still recommend reading it.
I arrived at the active-stative alignment of my main conlang project when trying to understand ergativity (when I joined CONLANG in 2000, the ergative wave of the late 1990s was just ebbing off), and found that it feels very natural to me.