In all languages, if some form denotes the metaperson ‘speaker + hearer(s)’, it must also denote the metaperson ‘speaker + hearer(s) + non-participant(s)’.
Standardized
IF a form denotes the metaperson ‘speaker + hearer(s)’, THEN it must also denote the metaperson ‘speaker + hearer(s) + non-participant(s)’.
Keywords
personal pronoun, person, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, speaker, hearer, non-participant, inclusive
Domain
inflection, syntax, lexicon
Type
implication
Status
achronic
Quality
absolute
Basis
400 world-wide distributed languages, see Sokolovskaja 1980: 98-99; Sokolovskaja surveyed systems of independent personal pronouns only.
1. Sokolovskaja recognizes the following metapersons:’speaker’, ‘hearer(s)’, ‘non-participant(s)’, ‘speaker + hearer(s)’, ‘speaker + non-participant(s)’, ‘hearer(s) + non-participant(s)’, and ‘speaker + hearer(s) + non-participant(s)’. 2. This universal was first suggested by Franz Boas (1911: 39-40): “A true first person plural is impossible, because there can never be more than one self. This logical laxity is avoided by many languages, in which a sharp distinction is made between the two combinations self and person or persons spoken to, or self and person or persons spoken of. I do not know of any language expressing in a separate form the combination of the three persons, probably because this idea readily coalesces with the idea of self and persons spoken to. These two forms are generally designated by the rather inaccurate term of ‘inclusive’ and ‘exclusive first person plural’, by which is meant the first person plural, including or excluding the person addressed”.3. The reverse is not true (cf. ##1476, 1477).4. This universal claims that an inclusive form is always a super-inclusive one, cf. #1463.
1. Sokolovskaja recognizes the following metapersons:’speaker’, ‘hearer(s)’, ‘non-participant(s)’, ‘speaker + hearer(s)’, ‘speaker + non-participant(s)’, ‘hearer(s) + non-participant(s)’, and ‘speaker + hearer(s) + non-participant(s)’. 2. This universal was first suggested by Franz Boas (1911: 39-40): “A true first person plural is impossible, because there can never be more than one self. This logical laxity is avoided by many languages, in which a sharp distinction is made between the two combinations self and person or persons spoken to, or self and person or persons spoken of. I do not know of any language expressing in a separate form the combination of the three persons, probably because this idea readily coalesces with the idea of self and persons spoken to. These two forms are generally designated by the rather inaccurate term of ‘inclusive’ and ‘exclusive first person plural’, by which is meant the first person plural, including or excluding the person addressed”.3. The reverse is not true (cf. ##1476, 1477).4. This universal claims that an inclusive form is always a super-inclusive one, cf. #1463.