In:Impersonal Constructions: A cross-linguistic perspective
Edited by Andrej L. Malchukov and Anna Siewierska
[Studies in Language Companion Series 124] 2011
► pp. 229–254
Passive to anticausative through impersonalization
The case of Vedic and Indo-European
Published online: 20 July 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.124.08kul
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.124.08kul
Vedic Sanskrit and other Indo-European languages attest a typologically remarkable change of passives to anticausatives. This semantic development is attested, foremost, for passives of several verbs of perception and knowledge (knowledge transfer) obviously, according to the scenario ‘Y is seen (known etc.) by smb.’ → ‘Y is seen (known etc.) [by smb.]’ → ’Y is seen (known etc.) [by generic passive agent]’ → ‘Y is visible (famous, etc.)’. A special variety of this development is instantiated by the passive of a verb of speech, ucyate ‘Y is pronounced’ → ‘Y [e.g. speech, musical instrument] sounds’. In addition, passive to anticausative transfer is attested for a small subgroup of verbs of caused motion. While in this latter case the rise of anticausative usages may be due to conceptualizing simple transitives as causatives (throw = ‘emake fall, make fly’, etc.), in cases of verbs of perception and knowledge we observe the rise of the anticausative usages through the stage which is called ‘impersonalization’ in Siewierska 1984 and explained in terms of ‘objectivization of knowledge’, i.e. knowledge without a knowing subject. In connection with these verbs, I will briefly discuss the relationships between ‘agentless’, ‘impersonalized’ and ‘impersonal’ passives.
Keywords: passive; anticausative; impersonalization; impersonal passive; verbs of perception; objectivization; Vedic; Indo-European
Cited by (27)
Cited by 27 other publications
Xiao, Yang
Dadan, Marcin R.
Giomi, Riccardo & Guglielmo Inglese
2024. Underspecification and ambiguity of voice markers. In Vagueness, Ambiguity, and All the Rest [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 347], ► pp. 110 ff.
Inglese, Guglielmo
Cennamo, Michela & Claudia Fabrizio
Cotticelli, Paola & Eystein Dahl
Dahl, Eystein
Dahl, Eystein
Fabrizio, Claudia
Luraghi, Silvia & Guglielmo Inglese
Melis, Chantal
Meyer, Robin
Seržant, Ilja A., Björn Wiemer, Eleni Bužarovska, Martina Ivanová, Maxim Makartsev, Stefan Savić, Dmitri Sitchinava, Karolína Skwarska & Mladen Uhlik
Breed, Adri & Daniël Van Olmen
Hock, Hans Henrich
2019. Anticausative and passive in Vedic. In Perspectives on Language Structure and Language Change [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 345], ► pp. 181 ff.
Hock, Hans Henrich
Dom, Sebastian, Leonid Kulikov & Koen Bostoen
Kulikov, Leonid & Nikolaos Lavidas
2015. Reconstructing passive and voice in Proto-Indo-European. In Proto-Indo-European Syntax and its Development [Benjamins Current Topics, 75], ► pp. 101 ff.
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 3 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
