The role of aktionsart in deverbal nouns: State nominalizations across languages
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/3849DOI
doi: 10.1017/S0022226711000351View/ Open
accepted manuscript version. Online version available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0022226711000351 (PDF)
Date
2012Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Most of the literature devoted to the study of deverbal nominalizations concentrates on the
complex event reading (La concentración de partículas tiene lugar a temperatura ambiente,
‘The concentration of particles takes place at room temperature’) and the object reading (El
paciente tenía concentraciones de calcio en el hombro, ‘The patient had calcium concentrations
in the shoulder’), while those nominalizations denoting states have remained, in general,
understudied (La concentración de Sherlock Holmes duró cinco horas, ‘Sherlock Holmes’ concentration lasted five hours’). In this paper we present their empirical properties and argue that, despite the empirical differences, state nominalizations and event nominalizations can
receive a unified account. We show that in Spanish, Catalan, French, English and German the
question of whether a deverbal nominalization denotes a state, an event or is ambiguous between both readings depends on independent properties of the verbal base, allowing us to propose a unified account of both classes of nominalizations: the productive nominalizers in
these languages can only denote the aspectual notions contained in the base’s Aktionsart. We
further argue that other languages, like Slovenian, have productive nominalizers that can
operate over the external aspect of the predicate; in these cases, the nominalization can denote aspectual notions not contained in the base’s Aktionsart.
Publisher
Cambridge University PressCitation
Journal of Linguistics 48(2012) nr. 1 s. 35-70Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
The following license file are associated with this item:
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Limits on P: filling in holes vs. falling in holes
Svenonius, Peter (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2003)All Germanic languages make extensive use of verb-particle combinations (known as separable-prefix verbs in the OV languages). I show some basic differences here distinguishing the Scandinavian type from the OV West Germanic languages, with English superficially patterning with Scandinavian but actually manifesting a distinct type. Specifically, I argue that the P projection is split into p and P ... -
Språkpolitikk og (u)synleggjering i det semiotiske landskapet på Universitetet i Tromsø
Johansen, Åse Mette; Bull, Tove (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2012)I denne artikkelen analyserer vi det semiotiske landskapet som famnar om og er ein del av staden Universitetet i Tromsø (UiT), inkludert Universitetssykehuset Nord-Norge (UNN). Analysen bygger på eit todelt datamateriale som omfattar fotografi frå universitetsområdet i tillegg til relevante dokument om språklovgjeving og andre offisielle vedtak om språkbruk. Dei aktuelle språka er norsk (bokmål ... -
Russian word-formation in contrast with Czech and Norwegian
Janda, Laura Alexis (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2010)