The middle voice in Baltic /
"Presentis a collection of studies on middle-voice grams in Baltic, that is, on a widely ramified family of constructions with different syntactic and semantic properties but sharing a morphological marker of reflexive origin. Though the emphasis is on Baltic, ample attention is given to other...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
2020.
|
Colección: | Valency, argument realization and grammatical relations in Baltic ;
v. 5. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- The Middle Voice in Baltic
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication page
- Table of contents
- Acknowledgement
- List of grammatical abbreviations
- Preface
- Chapter 1. Reflexives and middles
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Reflexive and middle
- 1.3 Explaining split reflexivity and reciprocity
- 1.4 Syntax and semantics
- 1.5 Chronology
- 1.6 Natural reciprocals
- 1.7 Autobenefactive reflexive verbs
- 1.8 Middle-voice markers licenced by prefixation
- 1.9 In conclusion
- Chapter 2. Metonymy and antimetonymy
- 2.1 The natural reflexive and metonymy
- 2.2 Extended metonymy
- 2.3 Metonymic reflexives and antipassives
- 2.4 Antimetonymic middles in Polish and elsewhere
- 2.5 Antimetonymic middles and antipassives
- 2.6 In conclusion
- Chapter 3. Antipassive middles
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Definition
- 3.3 Antipassives, deobjectives and deaccusatives
- 3.4 Deobjectives 1: The behaviour-characterizing use
- 3.5 Deobjectives 2: The activity subtype
- 3.6 Diachrony: The rise of deobjectives
- 3.7 Deaccusatives
- 3.7.1 The locative subtype
- 3.7.2 The instrumental subtype
- 3.8 The functional features of the deaccusative type
- 3.9 Diachrony: Deobjectives and deaccusatives
- 3.10 In conclusion
- Chapter 4. The permissive middle
- 4.1 The notion of permissive middle
- 4.2 The rise of the permissive middle
- 4.3 Old Lithuanian
- 4.4 Latvian
- 4.5 Two kinds of permissive middles
- 4.6 Syntactic interpretation
- 4.7 Autopermissive complement-taking verbs
- 4.8 Lexical permissives
- 4.9 The permissive middle in Slavonic
- 4.10 Permissives and curatives
- 4.11 Broader outlook
- Chapter 5. The anticausative
- 5.1 On the notion of anticausative
- 5.2 Argument structure
- 5.3 Surface-impact verbs
- 5.4 Surface-impact verbs and their anticausative derivatives
- 5.5 So-called converse reflexives
- 5.6 Emotive predicates
- 5.7 'Reflection' verbs
- 5.8 Phasal anticausatives
- 5.9 The status of converse reflexives
- 5.10 Unpaired surface-impact anticausatives
- 5.11 Surface-impact verbs elsewhere in grammar
- 5.12 In conclusion
- Chapter 6. Facilitatives
- 6.1 The notion of facilitatives
- 6.2 The classification of facilitatives
- 6.3 Adverbial modifiers
- 6.4 The expression of the agent and its syntactic status
- 6.5 Facilitatives from intransitives
- 6.6 Impersonal transitive facilitatives
- 6.7 Imperfective and perfective extensions
- 6.8 In conclusion
- Chapter 7. Further extensions from the facilitative middle
- 7.1 Introduction
- 7.2 The naturally non-volitional type
- 7.3 The achievement type
- 7.4 Non-volitional middles from one-place predicates
- 7.5 The desiderative extension
- 7.6 In conclusion
- Chapter 8. The coargumental middle
- 8.1 Logophoric middles or coargumental middles
- 8.2 Permissive verbs
- 8.3 Speech-act verbs and verbs of belief
- 8.4 Between speech act verbs and verbs of intention