The typology of structural deficiency: On the three grammatical classes
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.1.1995.851Abstract
It is a general property of language that words fall into classes. Among the many relevant oppositions (verbs/adjectives, transitives/ergatives, etc.), one distinguishes itself from all others: that instantiated by the opposition between different classes of pronouns.
This opposition is unique in regularly contrasting synonymous pairs; in cutting across all components of grammar; in having no systematic correlation with any interpretive characteristic (semantic or phonetic); in determining a large set of (apparently) absolute universals; and in cutting across lexical classes, §1.1.1-5.
The fundamental goal of the present inquiry is to uncover the primitive underlying these exceptional classes.
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Published
1995-04-01
How to Cite
Cardinaletti, Anna, and Michal Starke. 1995. “The Typology of Structural Deficiency: On the Three Grammatical Classes”. ZAS Papers in Linguistics 1 (April):1-55. https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.1.1995.851.
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