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Universal 251: rigid language & ¬manner adverb ⇒ ¬predicative use (nominal & possessive)

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Universal 251: rigid language & ¬manner adverb ⇒ ¬predicative use (nominal & possessive)

Original
All rigid languages for which the class of manner adverbs is irrelevant or a small and closed one do not allow the predicative use of possessive predicates, nor has the predicative use of bare nominal predicates been attested.
Standardized
IF parts-of-speech classification is rigid and there is no or a small and closed class of manner adverbs, THEN nominal and possessive predicates can not be used predicatively.
Keywords
word class, rigid, manner adverb, predicate, nominal, possessive
Domain
syntax
Type
implication
Status
achronic
Quality
absolute
Basis
37 languages of Hengeveld’s sample
Source
Hengeveld 1992: 135
Counterexamples

One Comment

  1. FP
    FP

    Hengeveld 1992: 65: “… non-specialized parts-of-speech systems can be subclassified into two major groups: those in which a single part of speech may be used in different functions, and those in which for certain functions a part of speech is lacking. The former may be called flexible languages, the latter rigid languages.”

    1. May 2020

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