Richard W wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 7:14 pm
bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 6:38 pm
Most languages have funny things going on with nominalisations, so I’m not sure it’s useful to call case-marking in nominalisations ‘split’. (Though English does have a split system, in the form of direct marking for nouns vs accusative for pronouns.)
Would you please dejargonise that. It doesn't look right, but I can't be sure until I understand it.
Sorry, which jargon do you want me to explicate? I don’t see anything particularly confusing there myself.
Kuchigakatai wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 7:28 pm
bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 6:38 pmThat being said, I’m not entirely sure your examples are actually split systems in the same way that, say, Dyirbal and Tibetan are. Firstly, action nouns are really something which takes place within the NP — they’ll
always be somewhat different to case-marking and other morphology. Most languages have funny things going on with nominalisations, so I’m not sure it’s useful to call case-marking in nominalisations ‘split’. (Though English does have a split system, in the form of direct marking for nouns vs accusative for pronouns.)
I feel you're getting tricked/confused by the terminology there though. English also has a nominative-accusative system in nouns. The definitions of morphosyntactic alignments involve syntax too, they're not just about morphology: …
This is why it’s useful to carefully separate the various areas where morphosyntactic alignment can appear! Specifically, for English:
- Verbal agreement is accusative for 3SG, direct/absent for everything else (which interestingly violates the animacy hierarchy!)
- Case-marking is accusative for pronouns, direct/absent for everything else
- Word order is consistently accusative.
Of course, in English, everything turns out either accusative or direct, and everything is accusative at least in word order, but it’s interesting to note that the conditioning environment changes depending on the area, and of course there are many languages with completely different alignments in each place. (So for instance, you get ones like Komnzo, with active-stative agreement, ergative case-marking, and neutral word order.)
Similarly, in action nouns you could have S=A but not =O, in the way things are marked via word order or prepositions or cases or marking within the action noun, etc. But English/French/Spanish/Arabic instead have ambiguous marking, where S=A=O ("the firing of the CEO").
…yes? I mean, I agree with all of this, I just don’t understand what your point is here.
Salmoneus once proposed a conlang idea I found very amusing, with a direct-inverse alignment accomplished purely via syntax, by requiring uninflected auxiliary verbs when this or that happened in the animacy hierarchy...
It gets weirder! Movima has direct-inverse
word order. Not only that, it’s fully syntactically direct-inverse as well — so, for instance, you can relativise on the intransitive subject, or on the less animate transitive argument, but not on the more animate transitive argument.