Oh, that’s true; I’d forgotten that English nominalisations always allow subject deletion. (I was actually asking the question more generally, not just about nominalisations, but I think your answer applies more generally as well.)
Syntax random
Re: Syntax random
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- dɮ the phoneme
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Re: Syntax random
Let me know if this question is better placed in another thread, but does anyone know of any pervasively head-final languages with wh-movement? Presumably if the wh-phase moves to the CP head as in English, you'd get rightward wh-movement, right? But the WALS chapter on wh-movement says this is extremely rare or not attested. What's going on with the asymmetry?
Ye knowe eek that, in forme of speche is chaunge
With-inne a thousand yeer, and wordes tho
That hadden pris, now wonder nyce and straunge
Us thinketh hem; and yet they spake hem so,
And spedde as wel in love as men now do.
(formerly Max1461)
With-inne a thousand yeer, and wordes tho
That hadden pris, now wonder nyce and straunge
Us thinketh hem; and yet they spake hem so,
And spedde as wel in love as men now do.
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Re: Syntax random
Wh-fronting in languages like English is a form of topical fronting, not moving the Wh-word into clause head position (though they are often the same). Languages like Japanese, Korean, and Choctaw all allow Wh-fronting, usually with similar rules to topical fronting, but I think full-on OSV sentences would probably only sound natural in very specific circumstances.dɮ the phoneme wrote: ↑Wed Sep 09, 2020 5:54 pm Let me know if this question is better placed in another thread, but does anyone know of any pervasively head-final languages with wh-movement? Presumably if the wh-phase moves to the CP head as in English, you'd get rightward wh-movement, right? But the WALS chapter on wh-movement says this is extremely rare or not attested. What's going on with the asymmetry?
I did it. I made the world's worst book review blog.
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Re: Syntax random
Right, wh-words end up in Spec-CP rather than the CP head, or something like that? My syntax knowledge is very rusty. I'm working on a head-final language at the moment, with relative clauses preceding the head noun, and I want to use European style relative pronouns that indicate the relativized position via case. So I'd like to end up with a construction like "I saw whom boy" for the "the boy I saw", etc. Is something like this attested at all?
Ye knowe eek that, in forme of speche is chaunge
With-inne a thousand yeer, and wordes tho
That hadden pris, now wonder nyce and straunge
Us thinketh hem; and yet they spake hem so,
And spedde as wel in love as men now do.
(formerly Max1461)
With-inne a thousand yeer, and wordes tho
That hadden pris, now wonder nyce and straunge
Us thinketh hem; and yet they spake hem so,
And spedde as wel in love as men now do.
(formerly Max1461)
Re: Syntax random
Today I saw an advertisement with an interesting line: ‘[Companyname] online delivers to you’. This is obviously an instance of noun incorporation (which clearly is more productive than I thought in English). However, what I find interesting here is the word order. English is an SVO language, so I might naïvely expect an incorporated object to go after the verb — but here it is the opposite order. Does anyone have an explanation (diachronic or otherwise) for why this happens? And are there any other incorporating SVO languages which show this seemingly counterintuitive word order?
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Re: Syntax random
Why would this be noun incorporation? "Online" is an adverb. I think the unmarked order for this sentence would be "<Company> delivers online to you" or "<Company> delivers to you online." It's a bit weird to me to put "online" before the verb... but that's a perfectly fine place to put an adverb. Try replacing it with one of: always, happily, promptly, quickly, electronically.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 3:37 am Today I saw an advertisement with an interesting line: ‘[Companyname] online delivers to you’. This is obviously an instance of noun incorporation (which clearly is more productive than I thought in English). However, what I find interesting here is the word order. English is an SVO language, so I might naïvely expect an incorporated object to go after the verb — but here it is the opposite order. Does anyone have an explanation (diachronic or otherwise) for why this happens?
But you also want to know about noun incorporation. So far as I can see, NV is the normal order for this in English: head-hunt, babysit, house-break, mind-read, ice-skate, pub-crawl, cherry-pick.
Re: Syntax random
Ah, that is true, sorry. (I typically use ‘online’ as an adjective or noun, rather than an adverb.)zompist wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 4:17 amWhy would this be noun incorporation? "Online" is an adverb. I think the unmarked order for this sentence would be "<Company> delivers online to you" or "<Company> delivers to you online." It's a bit weird to me to put "online" before the verb... but that's a perfectly fine place to put an adverb. Try replacing it with one of: always, happily, promptly, quickly, electronically.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 3:37 am Today I saw an advertisement with an interesting line: ‘[Companyname] online delivers to you’. This is obviously an instance of noun incorporation (which clearly is more productive than I thought in English). However, what I find interesting here is the word order. English is an SVO language, so I might naïvely expect an incorporated object to go after the verb — but here it is the opposite order. Does anyone have an explanation (diachronic or otherwise) for why this happens?
Yes, so my question still applies: why does English have OV incorporation when word order is SVO? And are there any other languages which do so as well?But you also want to know about noun incorporation. So far as I can see, NV is the normal order for this in English: head-hunt, babysit, house-break, mind-read, ice-skate, pub-crawl, cherry-pick.
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Re: Syntax random
My guess is that it leaves the verb at the end, where it can do verby things. "She babysat twice last week" is a lot more natural than "She sitbabied twice last week."bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 4:25 amYes, so my question still applies: why does English have OV incorporation when word order is SVO? And are there any other languages which do so as well?But you also want to know about noun incorporation. So far as I can see, NV is the normal order for this in English: head-hunt, babysit, house-break, mind-read, ice-skate, pub-crawl, cherry-pick.
Re: Syntax random
I’m not convinced: just because the noun is at the end of the verb complex, that doesn’t mean the noun needs to be the inflected part! A V+[N+inflection] construction like ‘I skate-iced’ is certainly unnatural, but a [V+inflection]+N construction like ‘I skated-ice’ is no less natural than the N+[V+inflection] order of ‘I ice-skated’.zompist wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 4:34 amMy guess is that it leaves the verb at the end, where it can do verby things. "She babysat twice last week" is a lot more natural than "She sitbabied twice last week."bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 4:25 amYes, so my question still applies: why does English have OV incorporation when word order is SVO? And are there any other languages which do so as well?But you also want to know about noun incorporation. So far as I can see, NV is the normal order for this in English: head-hunt, babysit, house-break, mind-read, ice-skate, pub-crawl, cherry-pick.
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Re: Syntax random
Well, no, because English does not allow inflections in the middle of a word.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 5:48 amI’m not convinced: just because the noun is at the end of the verb complex, that doesn’t mean the noun needs to be the inflected part! A V+[N+inflection] construction like ‘I skate-iced’ is certainly unnatural, but a [V+inflection]+N construction like ‘I skated-ice’ is no less natural than the N+[V+inflection] order of ‘I ice-skated’.
Re: Syntax random
So are you saying that the order of a verb and its incorporated noun is more closely correlated to the noun/modifier order than the V/O order? (I assume ‘GN’ here is ‘genitive+noun’.) That does sounds reasonable — but on the other hand, it’s not too hard to find counterexamples. (e.g. Skou has ‘noun adjunct’ constructions which are syntactically very similar to noun incorporation, in which the noun is placed before the verb, but Skou also has postposed adjectives.)
But how do we know that it’s one word? And besides, which is the relevant definition of word here anyway? (Besides, I believe there do exist languages which allow inflections in the middle of words, though I can’t quite remember which ones.)zompist wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 7:08 amWell, no, because English does not allow inflections in the middle of a word.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 5:48 amI’m not convinced: just because the noun is at the end of the verb complex, that doesn’t mean the noun needs to be the inflected part! A V+[N+inflection] construction like ‘I skate-iced’ is certainly unnatural, but a [V+inflection]+N construction like ‘I skated-ice’ is no less natural than the N+[V+inflection] order of ‘I ice-skated’.
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Re: Syntax random
I'd wager the OV order is historical, as a retention from the verb-final PIE. O-V compounds thus mirror Adv-V compounds in reflecting a straight univerbation of a verb phrase.
Re: Syntax random
Of course, English does have a few mutation plurals, such as tooth/teeth, indivisible forms such as paterfamilias/patresfamilias, menage a trois/menages a trois and Knight Templar/Knights Templar, and flexible compounds such as Lords Temporal and Lords Spiritual (conjoinable as Lords Spiritial and Temporal). Phrasal verbs may be examples in some lects, though in mine, the ready incorporation of objects argues against their being single words. Agent nouns are a bit awkward or even debatable, like colloquial eater upper and fully standard washers up.
Re: Syntax random
G+N and Adj+N seems to fit with SOV, though there is a recent claim that the correlation is merely a Eurasiatic inheritance / areal feature. However, to ice-skate feels more like a back formation from ice skater and ice skating, where G+N comes into play. Progressive forms feel less unnatural - as though they should be analysed as containing gerunds or participles rather than simply being verbal inflections. In this particular example, ice is not the object of to skate. Also, O-V ordering doesn't look like a O-V univerbation - IE O-V compounds are primarily nominal (or rather adjectival); one needs other elements to make a verb. Or am I overlooking clear counter examples?KathTheDragon wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 9:07 am I'd wager the OV order is historical, as a retention from the verb-final PIE. O-V compounds thus mirror Adv-V compounds in reflecting a straight univerbation of a verb phrase.
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Re: Syntax random
Calling it noun incorporation already assumes that it's one word!
Phonologically, these words have just one primary stress. Syntactically, nothing can come between the components.
Wordishness is a continuum, and many of these are not quite full words; this is reflected in the fact that some require a hyphen, and verbal inflection can sound a bit weird. (This seems most evident with nonce coinages. I could get away with "I'm going to lexicon-tinker all night", but maybe not "I lexicon-tinkered all night".)
(We can also contrast these with verb-particle compounds, which are lexical entries but resist word status. They are still separable: "I could eat that plate of cookies right up." Logically, we could fully compound and transfer the inflection to the particle— "I eatupped the cookies"— but we just don't. Note that we can do it if neither component is a verb: "I one-upped my brother.")
This isn't relevant to whether English can do it!Besides, I believe there do exist languages which allow inflections in the middle of words, though I can’t quite remember which ones.)
(Other languages allow VO compounds, notably Mandarin. OV order certainly isn't a universal!)
Richard's examples (like ménages à trois) are more interesting, though I'd point out that these are either foreign borrowings, or imitations of French. "Passersby" is attested, but there's a tendency to regularize it to "passerbys". So, like so many things in English, the prohibition isn't absolute. But overwhelmingly, English doesn't like inflections within a compound, so I think it's not surprising at all that the end of the verb, where inflections go, is preserved. The same thing happens with noun compounds: madman > madmen.
All of the words I've found seem pretty new. E.g. "babysit", surely one of the more established of these terms, is mid-20th century. I don't see how Old English habits would be relevant. But I'd love to see the oldest citation for such terms.KathTheDragon wrote:I'd wager the OV order is historical, as a retention from the verb-final PIE.
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Re: Syntax random
Sorry, one more thought. My impression is that we use O+V compounds as nouns far more readily than as verbs: "man-eating tiger" is fine, so is "man-eater", but "*The tiger man-ate all week" is not. It wouldn't surprise me that most or all of the actual verbs are back-formations from these.
Re: Syntax random
I'm not sure I've come across the latter - though I might instantly have corrected it to passersby. Although we have pushups (though I'm not happy with the spelling of that word), I have hangers-on.
Well, you can't get any older than Old English and still call it Englishzompist wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 4:43 pmAll of the words I've found seem pretty new. E.g. "babysit", surely one of the more established of these terms, is mid-20th century. I don't see how Old English habits would be relevant. But I'd love to see the oldest citation for such terms.KathTheDragon wrote:I'd wager the OV order is historical, as a retention from the verb-final PIE.
I'll open the bidding with 17th century kidnap, though Onions derives it from 17th century kidnapper in line with my view that it's a back-formation. Incidentally, another back-formation route is We've been blackerry picking, which could be interpreted simply as We've been picking blackberries rather than implying going somewhere and returning. [Postscript: I suspect I'm not checking for more recent posts between reading to the end of the thread and starting to compose a reply - I sometimes have to research before replying.]
English has had to handfast since the 14th century, but before that we only have the past participle going back to the 12th century and presumed to be borrowed from Old Norse handfesta.
Re: Syntax random
Brothers-in-law isn't based on French.
Hasn't, hadn't, doesn't, didn't. On the other hand, don and doff go stem-adverb-inflection.
Hasn't, hadn't, doesn't, didn't. On the other hand, don and doff go stem-adverb-inflection.
Re: Syntax random
Huh? No it doesn’t! There’s quite a few isolating languages with noun incorporation. (Niuean comes to mind; pity I can’t find a reference grammar to figure out whether its NI is within a single word or spans multiple words.)
That phonological criterion at least is debatable: it’s easy to apply with ice-skate, but I’d argue that e.g. mountain-climb has two stresses.Phonologically, these words have just one primary stress. Syntactically, nothing can come between the components.
Personally, I’d say that this has more to do with the productivity of incorporation (or a lack thereof) than wordhood: incorporated predicates are relatively unproductive, so resist new coinages.Wordishness is a continuum, and many of these are not quite full words; this is reflected in the fact that some require a hyphen, and verbal inflection can sound a bit weird. (This seems most evident with nonce coinages. I could get away with "I'm going to lexicon-tinker all night", but maybe not "I lexicon-tinkered all night".)
Interesting… I hadn’t noticed the different order. I might conjecture that it comes from the influence of prepositions: I [ate up] the plate of cookies can easily be reanalysed as I ate [up the plate of cookies]. (I find it interesting to compare this to other IE branches, e.g. Indo-Iranian, where incorporation consistently has a modifier+modified order for both noun and particle compounds… maybe this has something to do with their SOV word order?)(We can also contrast these with verb-particle compounds, which are lexical entries but resist word status. They are still separable: "I could eat that plate of cookies right up." Logically, we could fully compound and transfer the inflection to the particle— "I eatupped the cookies"— but we just don't. Note that we can do it if neither component is a verb: "I one-upped my brother.")
I did find myself wondering how you came to the conclusion that ‘English does not allow inflections in the middle of a word’, but I had forgot about this sort of reanalysis, which is indeed strong evidence that English hates middle-of-the-word inflections. (Even middle-of-the-phrase inflections are undesirable, with the best examples being French loans: attorneys general → attorney generals, sergeants major → sergeant majors.)This isn't relevant to whether English can do it!Besides, I believe there do exist languages which allow inflections in the middle of words, though I can’t quite remember which ones.)
…
Richard's examples (like ménages à trois) are more interesting, though I'd point out that these are either foreign borrowings, or imitations of French. "Passersby" is attested, but there's a tendency to regularize it to "passerbys". So, like so many things in English, the prohibition isn't absolute. But overwhelmingly, English doesn't like inflections within a compound, so I think it's not surprising at all that the end of the verb, where inflections go, is preserved. The same thing happens with noun compounds: madman > madmen.
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