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Universal 265:

Posted in Universals Archive

Universal 265:

Original
Active languages are characterized by dividing nouns into active (“animate”) and inactive (“inanimate”) classes and by the corresponding principle of dividing verbs into active (verbs of action) and stative (verbs of state) groups. Both of these groups form “covert” categories. Corresponding syntactic correlates are the opposition between active and inactive constructions and the distinction between near and distant objects.
Standardized
IF alignment is predominantly active, THEN both nouns and verbs are subdivided into active and inactive classes (animate vs. inanimate, action vs. state), and there is a corresponding distinction of active vs. inactive syntactic constructions, showing a distinction of objects into “near” and “distant” rather than direct and indirect/oblique.
Keywords
alignment, active, noun, noun classification, animacy, verb, verb classification, action, state, object, direct, indirect, oblique
Domain
inflection, syntax, lexicon
Type
implication
Status
achronic but presumably diachronically motivated
Quality
absolute
Basis
languages of North and South America, some ancient languages of the New East (esp. Elamite)
Source
Klimov 1977: 83
Counterexamples

One Comment

  1. FP
    FP

    Klimov being a “stadialist”, these implications are to be seen as characterizing developmental stages, with the ergative stage developing from the active stage and developing into the accusative stage.

    1. May 2020

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