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authorCamil Staps2016-10-17 12:25:51 +0200
committerCamil Staps2016-10-17 12:26:12 +0200
commit07229ae0ca1250e26a4c195a1086ccb24a0abb49 (patch)
tree24c89b7c89b58952c6e6badeaaa0f034d2a06d5c
parentHopper-Thompson (diff)
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+\documentclass[a4paper,twocolumn]{article}
+
+\usepackage[top=2cm]{geometry}
+\usepackage[british]{babel}
+\usepackage{stfloats}
+
+\usepackage{handouts}
+
+\usepackage[hidelinks]{hyperref}
+\usepackage{tikz}
+\usepackage[font=small]{caption}
+
+\title{\Large Handout of ``The Middle Voice''\footnote{Suzanne Kemmer (1993).}}
+\author{Camil Staps}
+
+\newcommand{\RM}[0]{\textsc{rm}}
+
+\begin{document}
+
+\maketitle
+
+\subsection*{Reflexive and Associated Middle Situation Types}
+\summary{
+ \subsubsection*{The direct reflexive}
+ According to Faltz (1977), the archetypal semantically reflexive context is a simple two-participant clause
+ where one participant is Agent or Experiencer and the other a Patient, while both refer to the same entity\pagenr{42}.
+ This is the semantic prototype, since whenever a language marks coreference in other situtations,
+ it also does in this situation\pagenr{43}.
+ This reflexive is called the \term{direct reflexive}.
+ It is defined by
+ \term{coreference}, narrowed down by
+ \term{scope}\note{only simple clauses} and
+ \term{thematic roles}\note{Agent/Experiencer and Patient (Faltz)/Stimulus(Kemmer)}.
+
+ A \term{reflexive marker} (\RM) is
+ ``a productive grammatical device that is used obligatorily
+ to mark direct reflexive contexts in at least the third person''\pagenr{47}.
+ All reflexive-marking languages use {\RM}s in the direct reflexive,
+ which is a second indicator that this is the semantic reflexive prototype.
+
+ The direct reflexive is a special case of a \term{two-participant event}.
+ The prototypical two-participant event has a human Agent act volitionally,
+ exerting physical force on an inanimate definite Patient,
+ which is directly affected by that event\pagenr{50}.
+ \parnote{This definition can be easily extended to include mental state- and perception-verbs,
+ using Experiencer/Stimulus terminology and/or the Initiator/Endpoint macroroles\pagenr{51}.}
+
+ \subsubsection*{Body action middles}
+ \term{Grooming actions} often have different markings than reflexive verbs,
+ so they are not a subset of the reflexive situation type\pagenr{54}.
+ \term{Changes in body posture}\note{stand (up); sit (down); lie (down)}
+ often appear as bare intransitives and therefore cannot be seen as direct reflexives either\pagenr{55}.
+ Also \term{nontranslational motion} verbs\note{turn, twist, bend (e.g. one's head)}
+ are often expressed using middle forms\pagenr{56},
+ as are verbs of \term{translational motion}\note{fly, flee, run, etc.}\pagenr{57}.
+}
+
+\end{document}