Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives

In many languages, antipassive morphology is comprised of aspectual morphology (Polinsky 2008). This thesis presents an analysis of the syntax and semantics of antipassives in Inuktitut by exploring the link between aspectual morphology and antipassive morphology. It resolves the longstanding questi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Spreng, Bettina
Other Authors: Johns, Alana, Linguistics
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published:
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32898
id ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/32898
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/32898 2023-05-15T16:55:35+02:00 Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives Spreng, Bettina Johns, Alana Linguistics NO_RESTRICTION http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32898 en_ca eng http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32898 morphology syntax viewpoint aspect punctuality antipassive aspectual contrasts relation lexical and viewpoint aspect semantics Inuktitut German perfective imperfective 0290 Thesis ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:22:05Z In many languages, antipassive morphology is comprised of aspectual morphology (Polinsky 2008). This thesis presents an analysis of the syntax and semantics of antipassives in Inuktitut by exploring the link between aspectual morphology and antipassive morphology. It resolves the longstanding question as to the factors governing the distribution of the antipassive morpheme, showing that the presence of the antipassive morpheme is determined by the meaning of the construction, i.e. it does not merely change the grammatical function. It is proposed that the antipassive construction has imperfective viewpoint in contrast to the ergative construction. Antipassive morphology is obligatory with punctual telic verbs, i.e. achievements, which are verbs that have perfective viewpoint by default. Antipassive morphology is thus necessary to convey imperfective viewpoint for verbs that are by default perfective. Using a modified Reichenbachian (Reichenbach 1947) framework, it is shown that imperfective viewpoint does not allow for telic interpretations. Instead, punctuality determines the types of viewpoint, which coincide with the aspectual meaning of the antipassive marker. Viewpoint contrasts in Inuktitut are encoded not only in morphology but in changes of case and agreement configurations. They are derived using a version of the Minimalist Program (Chomsky 2008). Imperfective viewpoint can either be default, in which case there is inherent case on the internal argument, or derived through the addition of antipassive morphology, in which case the construction closely parallels a nominative-accusative structure. Perfective viewpoint is encoded through absolutive case on the internal argument, either in an ergative construction or in a canonical intransitive construction with unaccusative verbs. The thesis provides insight into the relation between case-agreement configurations and aspectual contrasts in language and the nature of those aspectual contrasts. It also provides a new approach to the relation between lexical aspect and viewpoint by considering the role of punctuality. PhD Thesis inuktitut University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
institution Open Polar
collection University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
op_collection_id ftunivtoronto
language English
topic morphology
syntax
viewpoint aspect
punctuality
antipassive
aspectual contrasts
relation lexical and viewpoint aspect
semantics
Inuktitut
German
perfective
imperfective
0290
spellingShingle morphology
syntax
viewpoint aspect
punctuality
antipassive
aspectual contrasts
relation lexical and viewpoint aspect
semantics
Inuktitut
German
perfective
imperfective
0290
Spreng, Bettina
Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives
topic_facet morphology
syntax
viewpoint aspect
punctuality
antipassive
aspectual contrasts
relation lexical and viewpoint aspect
semantics
Inuktitut
German
perfective
imperfective
0290
description In many languages, antipassive morphology is comprised of aspectual morphology (Polinsky 2008). This thesis presents an analysis of the syntax and semantics of antipassives in Inuktitut by exploring the link between aspectual morphology and antipassive morphology. It resolves the longstanding question as to the factors governing the distribution of the antipassive morpheme, showing that the presence of the antipassive morpheme is determined by the meaning of the construction, i.e. it does not merely change the grammatical function. It is proposed that the antipassive construction has imperfective viewpoint in contrast to the ergative construction. Antipassive morphology is obligatory with punctual telic verbs, i.e. achievements, which are verbs that have perfective viewpoint by default. Antipassive morphology is thus necessary to convey imperfective viewpoint for verbs that are by default perfective. Using a modified Reichenbachian (Reichenbach 1947) framework, it is shown that imperfective viewpoint does not allow for telic interpretations. Instead, punctuality determines the types of viewpoint, which coincide with the aspectual meaning of the antipassive marker. Viewpoint contrasts in Inuktitut are encoded not only in morphology but in changes of case and agreement configurations. They are derived using a version of the Minimalist Program (Chomsky 2008). Imperfective viewpoint can either be default, in which case there is inherent case on the internal argument, or derived through the addition of antipassive morphology, in which case the construction closely parallels a nominative-accusative structure. Perfective viewpoint is encoded through absolutive case on the internal argument, either in an ergative construction or in a canonical intransitive construction with unaccusative verbs. The thesis provides insight into the relation between case-agreement configurations and aspectual contrasts in language and the nature of those aspectual contrasts. It also provides a new approach to the relation between lexical aspect and viewpoint by considering the role of punctuality. PhD
author2 Johns, Alana
Linguistics
format Thesis
author Spreng, Bettina
author_facet Spreng, Bettina
author_sort Spreng, Bettina
title Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives
title_short Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives
title_full Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives
title_fullStr Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives
title_full_unstemmed Viewpoint Aspect in Inuktitut: The Syntax and Semantics of Antipassives
title_sort viewpoint aspect in inuktitut: the syntax and semantics of antipassives
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32898
genre inuktitut
genre_facet inuktitut
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32898
_version_ 1766046575958687744