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Universal 1292: definite article (possessed NPs with a kinship term as head noun) ⇒ definite article (possessed NPs with a non-kinship term as head noun)

Posted in Universals Archive

Universal 1292: definite article (possessed NPs with a kinship term as head noun) ⇒ definite article (possessed NPs with a non-kinship term as head noun)

Original
If possessed NPs with a kinship term as head noun show the definite article, then so do possessed NPs with a nonkinship term as head noun.
Standardized
IF possessed NPs with a kinship term as head noun show the definite article, THEN possessed NPs with a nonkinship term as head noun show the definite article.
Keywords
definite article, possessive pronoun, kinship term
Domain
syntax
Type
implication
Status
achronic
Quality
absolute
Basis
languages surveyed in Haspelmath 1999
Source
Haspelmath 1999: 235
Counterexamples

One Comment

  1. FP
    FP

    The tendency to omit the definite article is greater when the possessed noun is a kinship term. Some examples from Haspelmath (1999: 236):KINSHIP NOUN: Italian: (*la) mia madre [(the) my mother]; Bulgarian: majka(*-ta) mi [mother(-ART) my]; Nkore-Kiga: (*o-)mukuru wangye [(ART-)sister my]. OTHER HEAD NOUN: Italian: la mia casa [the my house];Bulgarian: kola-ta mi [car-ART my];Nkore-Kiga: e-kitabo kyangye [ART-book my].

    1. May 2020

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