Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
935581 | Lingua | 2012 | 10 Pages |
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.