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Book

The Typology of Semantic Alignment

Edited by Mark Donohue and Søren Wichmann

Published in print January 2008 | ISBN: 9780199238385
Published online January 2009 | e-ISBN: 9780191716768 | DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199238385.001.0001
The Typology of Semantic Alignment

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Semantic alignment refers to a type of language that has two means of morphosyntactically encoding the arguments of intransitive predicates, typically treating these as an agent or as a patient of a transitive predicate, or else by a means of a treatment that varies according to lexical aspect. This book presents a collection of new typological examinations and case studies. International typologists explore the differences and commonalities of languages with semantic alignment systems and compare the structure of these languages to languages without them. They look at how such systems arise or disappear and provide areal overviews of Eurasia, the Americas, and the south-west Pacific — the areas where semantically aligned languages are concentrated.

Keywords: intransitive predicates; transitive predicates; Eurasia; America; south-west Pacific; history of linguistics

Book.  488 pages.  Illustrated.

Subjects: semantics

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