The (non-)finiteness of subordination correlates with basic word order: Evidence from Uralic
This paper aims to answer why the Uralic languages use, or used until intensive contacts with Indo-European languages, only non-finite subordination. It argues against regarding the evolution of finite subordination language development, showing that languages with non-finite subordination and parat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Acta linguistica academica 2023-06, Vol.70 (2), p.171-194 |
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description | This paper aims to answer why the Uralic languages use, or used until intensive contacts with Indo-European languages, only non-finite subordination. It argues against regarding the evolution of finite subordination language development, showing that languages with non-finite subordination and parataxis have the same expressive power as languages with finite subordination. It claims that non-finite subordination is a concomitant of SOV word order, and the growing proportion of finite subordination in the Uralic languages from east to west, and in the history of Hungarian is a consequence of the loosening of the SOV order and the emergence of SVO. The paper examines two hypotheses about the correlations between SOV and non-finite subordination, and SVO and finite subordination, the Final-Over-Final Condition of Biberauer, Holmberg Roberts (2014, etc.), a formal principle constraining clausal architecture, and the Minimize Domains Principle of Hawkins (2004, etc.), a functional principle of processing efficiency. The two theories make largely overlapping correct predictions for the Uralic languages, which suggests that the Final-Over-Final Condition may be the syntacticization of the condition that ensures processing efficiency in SOV and SVO languages. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1556/2062.2023.00647 |
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subjects | Diachronic linguistics Finiteness Finno-Ugrian studies Hungarian language Indo-European languages Language acquisition Language contact Parataxis Subordination (Grammatical) Syntactic processing Uralic languages Word order |
title | The (non-)finiteness of subordination correlates with basic word order: Evidence from Uralic |
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