summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--kemmer-handout.tex20
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/kemmer-handout.tex b/kemmer-handout.tex
index dc95d79..337a663 100644
--- a/kemmer-handout.tex
+++ b/kemmer-handout.tex
@@ -16,6 +16,7 @@
\author{Camil Staps}
\newcommand{\RM}[0]{\textsc{rm}}
+\newcommand{\MM}[0]{\textsc{mm}}
\begin{document}
@@ -34,7 +35,7 @@
\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 \term{reflexive marker} (\RM, as opposed to a middle marker \MM) 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,
@@ -248,17 +249,17 @@
are similar to mental events and share the high degree of affectedness of the Experiencer,
although they lack volitionality\pagenr{130}.
- Cognition verbs\note{e.g. `interpret', `consider'} may also appear with middle markers.
+ Cognition verbs\note{e.g. `interpret', `consider'} may also appear with an \MM.
\parnote{They seem related to emotion verbs:
in all but one of the languages considered,
- when cognition verbs could appear with middle markers, emotion verbs could as well,
+ when cognition verbs could appear with {\MM}s, emotion verbs could as well,
and vice versa.}
Perception events can be split up in three categories:
passive Experiencer-based\note{e.g. ``I smell garlic''};
active Experiencer-based\note{e.g. ``I smelled the meat to see if it was still good''};
Stimulus-based\note{e.g. ``Garlic smells good''}\pagenr{136}.
- They appear less with middle markers,
+ They appear less with {\MM}s,
possibly because the Experiencer is less affected than with other cognition events.
Cognition types are most commonly complex%
@@ -281,10 +282,10 @@
\end{figure}
\subsubsection*{Other related situation types}
- Middle markers are also used for \term{spontaneous events}\note{e.g. `grow', `be born'}\pagenr{144}.
+ {\MM}s are also used for \term{spontaneous events}\note{e.g. `grow', `be born'}\pagenr{144}.
They are different from other middle situation types in the complete lack of volitional initiation by the Patient\pagenr{146}.
- In some languages, middle markers can be used to express situations
+ In some languages, {\MM}s can be used to express situations
where an external causer is understood to exist, but de-emphasised for non-specificity or relative unimportance%
\note{e.g. ``This book reads well'', which implies a reader}\pagenr{147}.
As with spontaneous events, the focus is on the affected entity.
@@ -358,6 +359,13 @@
Middle morphology, then, is an expressive strategy for variations in the conceptual structuring of events\pagenr{209}.
The dotted arcs in \autoref{fig:domain-map} indicate the properties that middle types share (low elaboration of events)\pagenr{211}.
+
+ The essence of an {\MM} seems to be low participant distinguishability.
+ {\RM}s show properties of intransitivity iff they overlap with {\MM}s.
+ Reflexives have still lower distinguishability than their corresponding non-reflexives\pagenr{213}.
+
+ A \term{middle system} is the (dynamic) set of relations between the morphosyntactic and semantic middle categories.
+ The semantic middle is static and universal\pagenr{238}.
}
\end{document}