Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
935581 Lingua 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper discusses the unaccusative case pattern of ergative transitive predicates in Hindi, and attempts to derive it from a split between the workings of V and the head that introduces the subject. I adopt a system in which object case requires the joint work of v and V (Chomsky, 2007 and Chomsky, 2008). Following work by Mahajan, 1989, Mahajan, 1993 and Mahajan, 1997, I explore the idea that the ergative marker in Hindi is a P, which I view as a type of Voice head that combines with the v that introduces and case-marks the ergative subject with inherent Case. This overall approach bears directly on Mahajan's contention that ergative case-marking and the aspectual auxiliary have are two sides of the same phenomenon. Within a compositional analysis, have is be + P ( Freeze, 1992, Kayne, 1993, Mahajan, 1993, Mahajan, 1997 and Mahajan, 2000). Drawing from these works, I sketch an approach to the have-be alternation that links the aspectual component of have to features encoded on v.

► Nominative objects made possible by the dissociation between v and V. ► Subjects that merge post cyclically. ► Probe-goal relations responsible for auxiliaries have and be.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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