Some results of the project Languages under the Influence. Uralic syntax
changing in an asymmetrical contact situation
Date: November 30, 2017,
Place: Research Institute for Linguistics, Room 108 (Budapest, VI. Teréz
krt. 13.)
Program:
10.00–10.35: Eszter Simon–Ágnes Kalivoda: Introducing the UraLUID database
10.35–11.10: Erika Asztalos–Katalin Gugán - Nikolett Mus: Non-verb-final
sentences in Nenets, Khanty, and Udmurt: a path from OV to VO
11.10–11.45: Veronika Hegedűs–Nikolett Mus–Balázs Surányi: Copular
clauses in Nenets
11-45–11.55: break
11.55–12.30: Éva Dékány–Katalin Gugán–Orsolya Tánczos: From prenominal
to postnominal relative clauses in Udmurt and Khanty
12.30–13.05: Katalin É. Kiss–Orsolya Tánczos: From possessive agreement
to object marking: the functional evolution of the Udmurt -jez suffix
The talks will be 25-30 minutes long; each will be followed by a 5-10
minute discussion.
Abstracts:
/Eszter Simon–Ágnes Kalivoda: Introducing the UraLUID database/
We present UraLUID, a linguistically annotated database built within the
framework of the project Languages under the Influence. We aimed at
creating a valuable resource of Udmurt, Tundra Nenets, Synja and Surgut
Khanty. In order to provide a corpus as representative as possible, we
focused on processing texts collected from different times, authors and
genres. Thanks to the fieldwork carried out in the framework of the
project, UraLUID contains spoken versions of the languages as well.
We present the content and the structure of the database, discussing the
main issues we had to face during the development. Furthermore, we
demonstrate how to use the database by showing ELAN-files with audio
data and explaining the structure of annotation in detail.
/Erika Asztalos–Katalin Gugán - Nikolett Mus: Non-verb-final sentences
in Nenets, Khanty, and Udmurt: a path from OV to VO/
The order of clausal constituents interacts with their discourse
pragmatic function, and constituent order and patterns of
discourse-pragmatic organization are both prone to contact-induced
change (Aikhenvald 2006). In our talk, we survey patterns of (X)VO, or
more precisely, (X)VX orders in three genetically related (S)OV
languages, i.e., in Udmurt
(Permic), Surgut Khanty (Ob-Ugric) and Tundra Nenets (Samoyedic), all of
which are under heavy Russian, i.e., SVO influence. On the basis of a
predominantly corpus-based research involving the comparison of two
periods, we will show that the frequently hypothesized XV > VX change
involves, self-evidently, an increase in the proportion of
non-verb-final clauses. However, the analysis of the postverbal
constituents with respect to their syntactic and discourse-pragmatic
functions shows that the first steps of such a change can be described
as the broadening of the potential discourse-pragmatic function of the
postverbal elements, which may ultimately lead to the reanalysis of the
basic word order.
/Veronika Hegedűs–Nikolett Mus–Balázs Surányi: Copular clauses in Nenets/
Copular sentences exhibit rich and multifaceted and in many respects
still ill-understood morphosyntactic variation across languages. A
significant part of this variation concerns the morphosyntactic and
functional correlates within individual languages of the lexical
distinctions, if any, between different copulas, as well as the
licensing of the absence of an overt copula. This talk will reconsider
some descriptive generalizations regarding Tundra Nenets copular
sentences, namely, the distribution of be-verbs across different
constructions and the conditions on copula-drop in the language.
Concerning the first issue, we show that the contexts in which the
so-called existential verb and the copulas appear cannot be separated as
neatly as previously reported. Addressing the second topic, we propose,
adopting a Copula Support approach, that the omission of the copula is
licensed if tense and subject agreement features of T (the functional
head bearing them) enter syntactic agreement with the predicate, and get
morphologically realized elsewhere.
/Éva Dékány–Katalin Gugán–Orsolya Tánczos: From pre-nominal to
post-nominal relative clauses in Udmurt and Khanty/
This talk examines changes that have taken place in the properties of
relative clauses in Udmurt and Khanty. Originally, relatives were
categorically non-finite. They were headed by participial verb forms,
occupied a prenominal position, and had a gap at the relativization site
without having a relative pronoun. While these types of noun-modifying
clause are still in use, more recently both languages saw the emergence
of postnominal participial relatives as well as postnominal finite
relatives. These new relatives may feature relative pronouns, but the
distribution of these pronouns is not identical in the two languages.
The talk identifies the step of change from fully non-finite to fully
finite relatives as well as the internal structure of postnominal
relatives and the differences between the two languages.
/Katalin É. Kiss–Orsolya Tánczos: From possessive agreement to object
marking: the functional evolution of the Udmurt -jez suffix /
The talk analyzes the functional evolution of the Udmurt -jez morpheme
from crossreferencing a 3rd person singular possessor to marking
accusative case. The use of possessive agreement in non-possessive –
mainly determiner-like – functions is a shared property of several
Uralic languages. Among them, possessive agreement appears to have
obtained the widest range of roles in Udmurt, where the 3SG possessive
agreement suffix is also said to function as a nominalizer, to mark
contrast, to function as a kind of definite determiner, and to mark
accusative case. We will argue that these seemingly different roles are
instantiations of three major functions: cross-referencing a possessor,
encoding partitivity, and marking specific objects, which, in turn,
represent subsequent stages of a grammaticalization path. Evidence for
the hypothesized changes will be provided by parallel developments in
the sister languages, primarily Hungarian.