Article published In: Studies in Language
Vol. 30:3 (2006) ► pp.551–573
Antipassive in Matses
Published online: 28 July 2006
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.30.3.03fle
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.30.3.03fle
In this paper I analyze ergative patterns and the antipassive construction in Matses, a Panoan language spoken in western Amazonia. The Matses antipassive appears initially to be fairly typical, but is unique in that, in addition to the cross-linguistically typical indefinite Patient reading, it can also be used to code an unmentioned first-person Patient. Furthermore, only verbs specifying human O’s can take the antipassive suffix, and only verbs coding significantly affected Patients can have an indefinite reading. This is exactly the opposite of what one would expect of an antipassive construction. This atypical distribution of the Matses antipassive is explained by a combination of interacting factors, including a first-person empathy phenomenon and accommodation to a competing functionally similar object omission construction.
Cited by (13)
Cited by 13 other publications
Haude, Katharina
Dikmen, Furkan, Ömer Demirok & Balkiz Öztürk
Auderset, Sandra
2021. The antipassive and its relationship to person markers. In Antipassive [Typological Studies in Language, 130], ► pp. 385 ff.
Bugaeva, Anna
Janic, Katarzyna & Alena Witzlack-Makarevich
2021. The multifaceted nature of the antipassive construction. In Antipassive [Typological Studies in Language, 130], ► pp. 1 ff.
Konnerth, Linda
Say, Sergey
2021. Antipassive and the lexical meaning of verbs. In Antipassive [Typological Studies in Language, 130], ► pp. 177 ff.
Seržant, Ilja A., Katarzyna Maria Janic, Darja Dermaku & Oneg Ben Dror
2021. Typology of coding patterns and frequency effects of antipassives. Studies in Language 45:4 ► pp. 968 ff.
Heaton, Raina
Fleck, David W.
2019. Lexicalized nominalized clauses in Matses (Panoan). In Nominalization in Languages of the Americas [Typological Studies in Language, 124], ► pp. 557 ff.
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y.
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