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Universal 1296: unobservable > irreversible observable > monovalent reversible > bivalent locational

Posted in Universals Archive

Universal 1296: unobservable > irreversible observable > monovalent reversible > bivalent locational

Original
In languages where both resultatives proper and derived statives have the same form, the probability for a resultative to have stative meaning increases from right to left:

unobservable > irreversible observable > monovalent reversible > bivalent locational

Standardized
In languages where both resultatives proper and derived statives have the same form, the probability for a resultative to have stative meaning increases from right to left:

unobservable > irreversible observable > monovalent reversible > bivalent locational

Keywords
diathesis, resultative
Domain
syntax, semantics
Type
implicational hierarchy
Status
achronic
Quality
statistical
Basis
languages surveyed in Nedjalkov (ed.) 1983, Nedjalkov (ed.) 1988
Source
Kozinsky 1988: 505
Counterexamples

One Comment

  1. FP
    FP

    1. Cf. #1299.2. The resultative form expresses the resultative meaning proper if it denotes a state that is the result of a previous event. The meaning of the derived stative is ‘the state as such with no reference to its origins’, or, one might say, a primary natural state. Cf. Russian:(1) Resultative:Na stene visit kartina [on wall hangs picture] ‘There hangs a picture on the wall’ -> Na stene poveshena kartina [on wall hung-PastPart-Pass picture] ‘A picture is hung on the wall’(2) Stative:Na vetkax visjat jabloki [on branches hang apples] ‘There are apples hanging on branches’ -> * Na vetkax povesheny jabloki

    1. May 2020

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