Verb-particles: particle placement in passives
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25288Date
2014-08-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Lundquist, BjørnAbstract
As discussed in the chapter on particle placement in active clauses (Lundquist 2014a),
there is some interesting variation within Scandinavia with respect to particle placement
in active clauses. In participial passive clauses, the verb particle always prefixes to the
participle in Swedish, while it follows the participle in Danish and Icelandic, see e.g.
Johannisson (1939) and Svenonuis (2005) for details. In Standard Norwegian and Faroese,
the particle most often follows the participle, but in certain contexts, the particle can
also prefix to the participle, just like in Swedish. There are also dialects of Norwegian
where particles more freely prefix to participles, most notably the dialect spoken in
Romsdal, as discussed in detail in Sandøy (1979). The following examples show the two
possible particle placements in Scandinavian: (1) from Danish has the postparticipial
particle, and (2) from the Romsdal dialect has an incorporated particle (from Sandøy
1979):
Publisher
University of OsloCitation
Lundquist B. Verb-particles: particle placement in passives. Nordic Atlas of Language Structures (NALS) Journal. 2014;1:119-126Metadata
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