Deponency is a mismatch between form and function in language that was first described for Latin, where there is a group of verbs (the deponents) which are morphologically passive but syntactically active. This is evidence of a larger problem involving the interface between syntax and morphology: inflectional morphology is supposed to specify syntactic function, but sometimes it sends out the wrong signal. Although the problem is as old as the Western linguistic tradition, no generally accepted account of it has yet been given, and it is safe to say that all current theories of language have been constructed as if deponency did not exist.
In recent years, however, linguists have begun to confront its theoretical implications, albeit largely in isolation from each other. There is as yet no definitive statement of the problem, nor any generally accepted definition of its nature and scope.
This volume brings together the findings of leading scholars working in the area of morphological mismatches, and represents the first book-length typological and theoretical treatment of the topic. It will establish the important role that research on deponency has to play in contemporary linguistics, and set the standard for future work.
Les mer
This collection of essays by leading linguists on the theory and typology of mismatches between syntax and morphology will establish the important role that research on deponency has to play in contemporary linguistics, and set the standard for future work.
Les mer
Morphological typology of deponency ; Deponency, syncretism and what lies in between ; Extending deponency: implications for morphological mismatches ; A non-canonical pattern of deponency and its implications ; Deponency in the diachrony of Greek ; Deponency in Latin ; Declarative Deponency: a Network Morphology account of morphological mismatches ; The limits of deponency: a Chukotko-centric perspective ; Slouching towards deponency: a family of mismatches in the Bantu verb stem ; Spanish pseudoplurals: phonological cues in the acquisition of a syntax/morphology mismatch ; Pseudo-argument affixes in Iwaidja and Ilgar: a case of deponent subject and object agreement ; Afterward: How safe are our analyses?
Les mer
...I highly recommend this volume for its wealth of interesting data and the quality of the discussion.
The first book-length typological and theoretical treatment of deponency
Dr Dunstan Brown, Editor, British, Senior Lecturer in Linguistics, University of Surrey
Dr Andrew Hippisley, Editor, British/American, Lecturer in Computing, University of Surrey
The first book-length typological and theoretical treatment of deponency