In:Impersonal Constructions: A cross-linguistic perspective
Edited by Andrej L. Malchukov and Anna Siewierska
[Studies in Language Companion Series 124] 2011
► pp. 581–606
Impersonal constructions in some Oceanic languages
Published online: 20 July 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.124.20moy
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.124.20moy
Kanak and the Polynesian languages exhibit a wide range of impersonal constructions which may involve: (i) the lack or frequent omission of
arguments; (ii) optional impersonal construction of monovalent verbs or intransitive construction of bivalent verbs, associated with different meanings; (iii) differential agent marking such as oblique adjuncts or agents/experiencers expressed as a possessor; (iv) the use of impersonal pronouns or non-referential ‘dummy’ pronouns. These constructions are considered to be impersonal from two perspectives: (a) as constraints (impersonal verbs, dummy pronouns) and options (labile verbs) offered by a language system, and (b) as discourse strategies offered to the speaker of a language to make the agent impersonal (through its omission, by making it peripheral as an oblique adjunct or a possessor).
Keywords: Oceanic languages; labile verbs; argument omission; differential agent marking; impersonal pronouns
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Chappell, Hilary & Jean‐Christophe Verstraete
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