Universal 100: (Adj/Dem/Num) ≥ (Rel/Gen)
- Original
- Mobility Principle:
(Adj/Dem/Num) ≥(Rel/Gen).This principle claims that Adj, Dem, and Num are more mobile than Gen and Rel and can move around their heads more easily, producing a serialization which is opposite to that of the adposition to its modifiers (e. g. A N & Prep + NP, N A & NP + Postp etc.)
- Standardized
- Within noun phrases, adjectives, demonstratives, and numerals are more mobile than genitives and relative clauses insofar as they can appear on that side of a noun which is opposite to the adposition.
- Keywords
- order, adjective, demonstrative, numeral, relative clause, attributive, genitive, preposition, postposition
- Domain
- syntax
- Type
- implication
- Status
- achronic
- Quality
- absolute
- Basis
- sample of 350 languages in Hawkins 1983
- Source
- Hawkins 1983: 93
- Counterexamples
1. Mobility Principle: “” means “greater or equal mobility, where mobility refers to likelihood of deviance from Adposition + NP serialization.”2. Since the 1990s, Hawkins proposes alternative explanations of his universals (see e.g. Hawkins 1993: 234).