The Lexical Underspecification Of Bantu Causatives And Applicatives

dc.contributor.authorWechsler, Mattie
dc.date.accessioned2024-03-18T11:07:07Z
dc.date.available2024-03-18T11:07:07Z
dc.date.issued2020-04-29
dc.description.abstractThis paper presents original evidence for an additional merge location and semantic interpretation of Bantu applicatives, drawing on complex multiply applicativized and causativized constructions for empirical support. The paper also identifies and discusses challenging data from Bantu causatives. Previous analyses of causative and applicative constructions in the world’s languages have enumerated different kinds of causative and applicative heads, stored separately in the lexicon, each with their own particular selectional requirements. As the number of attested structural positions, potential complements, and semantic interpretations for these heads grow in the literature, however, the model bloats and becomes less compelling. I ultimately adopt a recent analysis from Wood & Marantz (2017) and assert that a single underspecified argument introducer is sufficient to account for the Bantu data I present. In order to accommodate the new theory of argument introduction, I also propose a new, more semantically-oriented, model of causative complement selection.
dc.identifier.doi10.5281/zenodo.3776551
dc.identifier.doi10.60763/africarxiv/779
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.africarxiv.org/handle/1/826
dc.subjectBantu
dc.subjectBantu applicatives
dc.subjectBantu causatives
dc.titleThe Lexical Underspecification Of Bantu Causatives And Applicatives

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