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External Possession
External Possession Constructions (EPCs) are found in nearly all parts of the world and across widely divergent language families. The data-rich papers in this first-ever volume on EPCs document their typological variability, explore diachronic reasons for variations, and investigate their functions and theoretical ramifications. EPCs code the possessor as a core grammatical relation of the verb and in a constituent separate from that which contains the possessed item. Though EPCs express possession, they do so without the necessary involvement of a possessive predicate such as “have” or “own”. In many cases, EPCs appear to “break the rules” about how many arguments a verb of a given valence can have. They thus constitute an important limiting case for evaluating theories of the relationship between verbal argument structure and syntactic clause structure. They also raise core questions about intersections among verbal valence, cognitive event construal, voice, and language processing.
[Typological Studies in Language, 39] 1999. ix, 573 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 21 October 2008
Published online on 21 October 2008
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments | pp. ix–9
- I. Introdution
- External Possession: What, Where, How, and WhyDoris L. Payne and Immanuel Barshi | p. 3
- II. Psycholinguistic Perspectives on External Possession
- External Possession and Language ProcessesMurray Singer | p. 33
- External Possession Constructions in Japanese: A Psycholinguistic PerspectiveKeiko Uehara | p. 45
- III. Comparative Studies
- Body-Part EP Constructions: A Cognitive/Functional AnalysisMaura Velázquez-Castillo | p. 77
- External Possession in a European Areal PerspectiveMartin Haspelmath | p. 109
- Mapping Possessors: Parameterizing the External Possession ConstructionDonna B. Gerdts | p. 137
- IV. External Possession, Topics, and Subjects
- External Possessor and Logical Subject in Tz’utujilJudith Aissen | p. 167
- The Double Unaccusative Construction in Sinitic LanguagesHilary Chappell | p. 195
- External Possession in CreekJack B. Martin | p. 229
- Chickasaw SubjecthoodPamela Munro | p. 251
- V. The Breadth of External Possession
- External Possession in Mohawk: Body Parts, Incorporation, and Argument StructureMark C. Baker | p. 293
- “Where” rather than “What”: Incorporation of ‘Parts’ in TotonacPaulette Levy | p. 325
- External Possessor in Oluta Popoluca (Mixean): Applicatives and Incorporation of Relational TermsRoberto Zavala Maldonado | p. 339
- Syntactic Roles vs. Semantic Roles: External Possession in Tukang BesiMark Donohue | p. 373
- External Possession in SahaptianNoel Rude | p. 403
- External Possession Constructions in Nyulnyulan LanguagesWilliam B. McGregor | p. 429
- On the Properties of Emai PossessorsRonald P. Schaefer | p. 449
- From Interest to Ownership: a Constructional View of External PossessorsMirjam Fried | p. 473
- External Possession, Reflexivization and Body Parts in RussianVera I. Podlesskaya and Ekaterina V. Rakhilina | p. 505
- Possessor Raising in a Language that Does Not Have AnyMaria Polinsky and Bernard Comrie | p. 523
- Authors Index | pp. 543–548
- Language Index | pp. 549–554
- Subject Index | pp. 555–573
Cited by (39)
Cited by 39 other publications
Dixon, Sally
Aranovich, Raúl & Jong-Bok Kim
2024. Contrasts in the Spanish and Korean external possession constructions. Languages in Contrast 24:2 ► pp. 271 ff.
Moezzipour, Farhad & Seyyed Ali Ostovar-Namaghi
Rose, Françoise & An Van linden
de Chene, Brent
Lesage, Suzanne
Tyler, Matthew
Cenerini, Chantale
2018. External possessor constructions and Cree relational inflection compared. In Recent developments in Functional Discourse Grammar [Studies in Language Companion Series, 205], ► pp. 89 ff.
Payne, Doris L., Alejandra Vidal & Manuel A. Otero
2018. Locative, existential and possessive predication in the Chaco. In Nonverbal predication in Amazonian languages [Typological Studies in Language, 122], ► pp. 263 ff.
Tang, Kevin & Ryan Bennett
Peregrina Llanes, Manuel, Albert Álvarez González & Zarina Estrada-Fernández
2017.
Transitivity and valency-changing operations in Huasteca Nahuatl. In
Verb Valency Changes [Typological Studies in Language, 120], ► pp. 81 ff.
Schultze‐Berndt, Eva
Boro, Krishna
Hagège, Claude
Nuger, Justin
Nuger, Justin
Rodríguez-Mondonedo, Miguel & Stephen Fafulas
2016. Double possession in Peruvian Amazonian Spanish. In Inquiries in Hispanic Linguistics [Issues in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics, 12], ► pp. 335 ff.
Novák, Michal & Anna Nedoluzhko
Simatos, Isabelle
Yoon, James Hye Suk
Kiss, Katalin
Niclot, Domenico
2014. From semantic roles to evaluative markers. The dative and affected possessors. In Perspectives on Semantic Roles [Typological Studies in Language, 106], ► pp. 271 ff.
Wiemer, Björn & Valgerður Bjarnadóttir
2014. On the non-canonical marking of the highest-ranking argument in Lithuanian and Icelandic. In Grammatical Relations and their Non-Canonical Encoding in Baltic [Valency, Argument Realization and Grammatical Relations in Baltic, 1], ► pp. 301 ff.
Hewitt, Steve
Lee-Schoenfeld, Vera
SUZUKI, TAKERU
Junker, Marie-Odile
Payne, Doris L.
2003. Review of Baron, Herslund & Sørensen (2001): Dimensions of possession. Functions of Language 10:1 ► pp. 109 ff.
Padučeva, Elena Viktorovna
Roberts, Taylor
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