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Universal 1650:

Posted in Universals Archive

Universal 1650:

Original
If L is a rigid verb-final language in its basic word order, the rhematic focus of a sentence of L is most likely to be in the position immediately preceding the finite verb.
Standardized
IF basic word order is rigidly verb-final, THEN the rhematic focus of a sentence is most likely to be in the position immediately preceding the finite verb.
Keywords
order, verb-final, rheme
Domain
syntax
Type
implication
Status
achronic
Quality
absolute?
Basis
Telugu, Laccadive Malayalam, Tamil (all Dravidian), Dogri, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi-Urdu (all Indo-Aryan), Sherpa (Sino-Tibetan), Turkish, Mongolian (Altaic) , Japanese (Japanese-Ryukyuan), Korean (Altaic(-like))
Source
Kim 1988: 150
Counterexamples

One Comment

  1. FP
    FP

    1. The hypothesis holds in a number of languages which do not necessarily exhibit a rigid verb-final constraint on the surface. For instance, Hungarian (Ugric) and Kartvelian languages including Georgian – equivocally having VO or OV order – display rigorous linear order focusing. WH-words in Modern Eastern Armenian (a non-rigid vebr-final language) almost always occur before the verb, which is in turn frequently followed by non-focused material. Another verb-final language, Basque, a type 24 language shares the same properties. (Kim 1988: 161)2. See similar observations by Dezsö: ##1669, 1670.

    1. May 2020

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