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      Differential object marking: Nominal and verbal parameters

      Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America
      Linguistic Society of America

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          Abstract

          Rich comparative-typological work has established differential object marking (DOM) as a linguistic universal based on various dimensions of nominal and verbal markedness where more marked categories are more likely to be morphologically marked than unmarked ones (Aissen 2003). However, despite the seemingly uniform and homogeneous properties in the world’s examples, the great variety and diversity of lexical sources raise the possibility of there being microvariations between different types of DOM. Romance preposition ad and Chinese co-verb ba are two mainstream examples of DOM and a comparison shows that different lexical sources can give rise to nominally-driven and verbally-driven mechanisms of DOM, since while Romance ad is reanalysed as a nominal Case-marker and is extended to all relevant types of object nouns (animate/referential), Chinese ba is embedded in the verbal domain where it selects transitive/affective types of verb phrases. This comparison opens up new perspectives on the mechanisms of DOM, namely the clustering of nominal and verbal markedness which can be shown to correlate with the lexical sources of the DOM-markers.

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          Journal
          Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America
          Proc Ling Soc Amer
          Linguistic Society of America
          2473-8689
          March 23 2020
          March 23 2020
          : 5
          : 1
          : 670
          Article
          10.3765/plsa.v5i1.4748
          050a8807-c983-4d41-8dff-38f118bb1817
          © 2020

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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