The disjoint verb form and an empty immediate after verb position in Makhuwa
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.43.2006.293Abstract
The Bantu language Makhuwa makes a distinction between cojoint and disjoint verb forms. Two hypotheses are made from generalisations on the distribution of the conjoint and disjoint verb forms in Makhuwa. 1) The verb appears in its conjoint form when a focal element occupies the Immediate After Verb (IAV) position; 2) the verb appears in its disjoint form when the IAV position is empty. A syntactic analysis is provided that accounts for these hypotheses if the IAV position is defined in terms of structural rather than linear adjacency between two heads in a direct c-command relation. In the syntactic analysis two focus projections are proposed: one under TP (Ndayiragije 1999) hosting the disjoint morpheme and one under vP, to whose specifier focal elements move. Non-focal elements remain in-situ. This analysis accounts both for the strong adjacency requirement of a cojoint verb form and its focal object and for the empty IAV position that requires a verb to appear in its disjoint form.
Downloads
Veröffentlicht
2006
Zitationsvorschlag
van der Wal, Jenneke. 2006. „The Disjoint Verb Form and an Empty Immediate After Verb Position in Makhuwa“. ZAS Papers in Linguistics 43 (Januar):233-56. https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.43.2006.293.
Ausgabe
Rubrik
Artikel