Skip to content
Universal 672:
- Original
- See Graphics
- Standardized
- see Graphics
- Keywords
- order, noun, adjective, attributive, verb, object, topic, comment, preposition, postposition dependent-marking, analytic, synthetic morphosyntax, word accent, compound accent, phrase accent, syllable, length, vocalism, timing, sterss, vowel inventory, noun class, gender, article
- Domain
- morphology, syntax, prosodic phonology
- Type
- mutual implication
- Status
- achronic
- Quality
- statistical
- Basis
- Bally: modern French, German; Wartburg: French, Italian, Spanish; Lohmann: German
- Source
- Bally 1944, Wartburg 1943, Lohmann 1949a, Lohmann 1949b, summarized in Plank 1998
- Counterexamples
- For counterexamples of the correlation between verb/object and noun/modifier orders see #107.
1. * as a type of syntactic marking Lohmann mentions “agreement”;** as a type of syntactic marking Lohmann mentions “rigid order”.2. See comments to #894.3. While Bally had argued that inflections (dĂ©terminĂ©s) or their equivalents precede stems (dĂ©terminants)in the progressive order and follow stems in the anticipatory order, Hintze 1974 saw it the other way round. Again differing from Bally et al., Hintze believed that accent was preferably assigned to the dĂ©terminĂ©, this being the semantic core of a construction, rather than to the dĂ©terminant. 4. Cf. Nichols’ statement (#438) about the correlation between the type of head/dependent marking and word order.