In:Predication in African Languages
Edited by James Essegbey and Enoch O. Aboh
[Studies in Language Companion Series 235] 2024
► pp. 189–221
Chapter 7The eventive functional sequence
Take and give serial verb constructions in Gungbe
Published online: 18 July 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.235.07kot
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.235.07kot
Abstract
The Kwa languages (Niger-Congo) of West Africa are well-known for displaying Serial Verb
Constructions (SVCs). The literature on SVCs contains various definitions of the phenomenon and recapitulates the
general observation that these constructions express fine-grained information about a complex event and the
participants involved therein. This paper seeks to shed light on the structure that underlies Take and Give SVCs in
Gungbe, a Gbe (Kwa) language spoken in Benin and Nigeria. The examples discussed in the paper demonstrate how Gungbe
is able to employ SVCs to encode specific details about the eventive structure. The proposed analysis further sheds
light on elements which were classified in the Kwa literature as ‘verbid’ (cf. Ansre 1966) for their ambiguous status between adpositions and lexical verbs. It is argued that the
ambiguity reduces to the nature of roots and their functions in Gungbe: the same root can occupy different grammatical
functions.
Keywords: serial verb constructions, Kwa languages, eventive structure
Article outline
- 1.Prelude
- 2.The Kwa data
- 2.1Take-series
- 2.2Give-series
- 2.3Intermezzo
- 3.The necessity of a decomposed V
- 3.1Demarcating a functional layer within V
- 3.2Double object constructions and give-series
- 3.3Decomposing V
- 3.3.1Subevents in the functional sequence
- 3.4Two verb classes
- 3.5Initiation-process verbs
- 3.5.1Initiation-process-result verbs
- 4.Reframing the Kwa data
- 4.1Spelling out Take-series
- 4.2Spelling out Give-series
- 5.Coda
Notes Abbreviations References
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