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   » » Wiki: Split Ergativity
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In linguistic typology, split ergativity is a feature of certain languages where some constructions use ergative syntax and morphology, but other constructions show another pattern, usually nominative–accusative. The conditions in which ergative constructions are used vary among different languages.


Nominative–accusative vs. ergative–absolutive
Nominative–accusative languages (including European languages, with the notable exception of ) treat both the actor in a clause with a and the experiencer in a clause with an intransitive verb in the same way grammatically. If the language uses , they take the same case. If it uses word order, it is parallel.

For example, consider these two English sentences:

  • Jane was chasing Max.
  • Jane was sweating.

The grammatical role of "Jane" is identical. In both cases, "Jane" is the subject.

In ergative–absolutive languages (such as and Georgian, or the Eskaleut and languages), there is a different pattern. The patient (or target) of a transitive verb and the experiencer of an intransitive verb are treated the same grammatically. If the two sentences above were expressed in an ergative language, "Max" in the former and "Jane" in the latter would be parallel grammatically. Also, a different form (the ergative) would be used for "Jane" in the first sentence.

For example, in the following Inuktitut sentences, the subject 'the woman' is in ergative case ( arnaup) when occurring with a transitive verb, while the object 'the apple' ( aapu) is in absolutive case. In the intransitive sentence, the subject 'the woman' arnaq is in absolutive case.

  • Arnaup nirijanga aapu. 'The woman is eating the apple.'
  • Arnaq pisuktuq. 'The woman is walking.'

In split ergative languages, some constructions pattern with nominative–accusative, and others with ergative–absolutive.


Split conditions
The split is usually conditioned by one of the following:

  1. The presence of a discourse participant (a first or second person) in the proposition. The Australian language behaves ergatively in all contexts unless one of those is involved. When a first- or second-person pronoun appears, however, it is marked according to a nominative–accusative pattern (with the least-marked case, when it is the agent or intransitive, or with the most marked case, when it is the patient). That can be explained in terms of the high of a first-person or second-person speaker in the animacy hierarchy.
  2. The use of certain aspects and/or tenses in the verb. The Indo-Iranian family, for example, shows a split between the perfective and the imperfective aspect. In Hindustani (-), a in the perfective aspect causes its arguments to be marked by an ergative pattern, and the imperfective aspects trigger accusative marking.
  3. The agentivity of the intransitive subject. In languages like , arguments of active verbs, such as to run, are marked like transitive agents, as in accusative languages, but arguments of inactive verbs, such as to stand are marked like transitive objects, as in ergative languages. Languages with such a marking are known as and are formally a subtype of .
  4. Pragmatic considerations or for emphasis, contrast, or clarity. In certain Tibeto-Burmese languages, elicited data has consistent ergative, aspectually split-ergative or active-stative case marking pattern, and in natural discourse the “ergative” marking is found only in some clauses, often a minority, usually with some pragmatic sense of emphasis or contrast (DeLancey, 2011).


Examples

Hindi–Urdu
An example of split ergativity conditioned by the grammatical aspect is found in Hindustani (-); in the perfective aspect of transitive verbs (in active voice), the subject takes and the direct object takes an unmarked identical to the , which is sometimes called . However, in all other aspects ( & progressive), subjects appear either in the / or (see ), while direct objects continue to appear in the (the subject of such sentences is differentiated from the direct object not from a difference in case but from the agreement of the verb with the subject as well as other syntactic and contextual cues such as word order and meaning).

In the following perfective sentence, the agent laṛke-ne (boy) is marked for , while the undergoer kitāb (book) is in unmarked nominative case. The verb kharīdī (bought) has the feminine ending , showing gender agreement with the undergoer kitāb (book).

In the corresponding imperfective () sentence, the agent laṛkā (boy) is in unmarked . The habitual participle form kharīdatā (buy) has the masculine ending and thus agrees with the agent laṛkā (boy).

Perfective constructions with certain VV (verb-verb) complexes do not employ ergative case marking (see: ). In perfective constructions, the agent argument is ideally assigned with an ergative case; however in cases like the first example shown below that does not happen. This is because the explicator verb gayī (gone) which although undergoes semantic bleaching but still retains its intransitivity which does not allow for an ergative case assignment to the agent argument (i.e., ninā). This is why as shown in the second example below, VV complexes involving a transitive (e.g., phẽkā "threw") can employ ergative case to agent arguments.


Chol (Mayan)
The language has split-ergative person marking.

In transitive clauses, verbs are framed by a person marking prefix (called "set A" in Mayan linguistics) that expresses the subject, and a suffix that expresses the object (= "set B").

In intransitive clauses, the subject can either be represented by a set A-person marker, or a set B-person marker, depending on aspect.

In perfective aspect, Chol has ergative–absolutive alignment: the subject of the intransitive verb is expressed by a suffixed person marker, thus in the same way as the object of transitive verbs.

In imperfective aspect, Chol has nominative–accusative alignment: the subject of the intransitive verb is expressed by a prefixed person marker, thus in the same way as the subject of transitive verbs.


Sahaptin
In Sahaptin, the split is determined by the person of both subject and object. The ergative suffix -nɨm occurs only for third-person subjects for which the direct object is in the first or the second person.

Another ergative suffix, -in, marks the subject in the inverse. Both subject and object are then always in the third-person.

Direct (same as above example):

Inverse:


Notes

Bibliography
  • Dixon, R. M. W. (1994). Ergativity. Cambridge University Press. .

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