Affectedness At The Morphosyntax Semantics Interface


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Affectedness at the Morphosyntax-Semantics Interface


Affectedness at the Morphosyntax-Semantics Interface

Author: Semra Kızılkaya

language: en

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Release Date: 2024-05-13


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Affectedness at the Morphosyntax-Semantics Interface


Affectedness at the Morphosyntax-Semantics Interface

Author: Semra Kızılkaya

language: en

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Release Date: 2024-07-01


DOWNLOAD





The monograph explores the semantic and morphosyntactic representation of affectedness, i.e., the property of an event participant to undergo change, in transitive predicates. Specifically, it provides a first in-depth investigation of how affectedness, the notion of path, and resultativity determine Differential Object Marking (DOM) in Turkish. It argues that affectedness is the crucial event semantic characteristic enhancing DOM, and articulates a theoretical link between affectedness in the lexical syntactic structure and morphological accusative marking. The study addresses affectedness from a cross-linguistic perspective and makes a remarkable contribution to our understanding and modelling of the syntax-semantics interface.

Affectedness at the Morphosyntax-Semantics Interface


Affectedness at the Morphosyntax-Semantics Interface

Author: Semra Kizilkaya

language: en

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter

Release Date: 2024-07


DOWNLOAD





The monograph explores the semantic and morphosyntactic representation of affectedness, i.e., the property of an event participant to undergo change, in transitive predicates. Specifically, it provides a first in-depth investigation of how affectedness, the notion of path, and resultativity determine Differential Object Marking (DOM) in Turkish. It argues that affectedness is the crucial event semantic characteristic enhancing DOM, and articulates a theoretical link between affectedness in the lexical syntactic structure and morphological accusative marking. The study addresses affectedness from a cross-linguistic perspective and makes a remarkable contribution to our understanding and modelling of the syntax-semantics interface.