dc.description.abstract | The thesis deals with one particular way of deriving perfective verbs in Russian, namely,
prefixation. Prefixes are interesting not only because they turn imperfective verbs into
perfectives, but also because they reveal dependencies between two different types of
predicational structure, on the one hand, and the connection of event quantification with
the event and argument shape, on the other.<br/>
The type of prefix simultaneously depends on the type of imperfective it attaches to and
affects the syntactic distribution and the argument structure of its host verb. There are
two types of prefix studied in the dissertation: lexical and superlexical. Lexical prefixes
(LPs) merge in the extended prepositional structure as heads of PathP and attach to
lexical verbs. Superlexical prefixes (SLPs) usually operate as quantifiers that apply at the
level of VP. Lexical prefixes readily attach to transitive and unaccusative verbs, whereas
unergative verbs serve as better hosts for superlexical prefixes. In fact, just a handful of
LPs occur on unergative verbs and no PP complements can follow them. The reason for
such a peculiar behavior of unergatives is mysterious, since nothing in the two
predicational structures (VP and PP) would preclude them from combining with each
other.<br/>
At the same time, it is not immediately clear what factor is crucial in selecting a type of
prefixation: the argument structure or the aspectual characteristic of an imperfecticve
verb. Motion verbs seem to provide the answer. Directed and non-directed motion verbs
convey two clear imperfective readings, progressive and pluractional, respectively. In
addition, when intransitive, directed motion verbs represent the unaccusative argument
structure; non-directed motion verbs the unergative argument structure. Lexical prefixes
attach to directed motion verbs and do not attach to non-directed motion verbs.
Superlexical prefixes display reverse distribution. To find out what underlies such a neat
split, the investigation of Path arguments of motion verbs has been undertaken. The
conclusion reached as a result of this investigation is: non-directed motion verbs, in
particular, and unergatives in general contain conflated material from the prepositional
structure. As the conflated material is PathP, there is no room for the merge of lexical
prefixes. <br/>
However, when it comes to superlexical prefixation, the aspectual characteristics of the
verb come to the foreground. In this thesis just two superlexicals are considered:
accumulative na- and distributive pere-. Both prefixes select for the particular event
shape, so that the event can be measured: cumulative or pluractional. The arguments of
the verb are used by the prefix-quantifier as a measure scale (with na-) or as a coverset
defining the cardinality of the pluractional event (with pere-). The discussion of these two
prefixes closes the dissertation, but a number of questions related to the interrelation
between the verb, the prefix and the internal argument are still left open for further
research. | en |