{"title":"VO or OV","authors":"Hans Broekhuis","doi":"10.1075/lv.22005.bro","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n This article sketches a new analysis of the diachronic development found in many West Germanic languages from a\n hybrid VO-OV order to a rigid OV or VO order. The discussion departs from the discussions in Struik & Van Kemenade (2020/2022) and Struik & Schoenmakers (to appear) on the diachronic development of English/Dutch, which focus on the\n role of object shift and information structure. My interpretation of their data will be based on an earlier analysis of the\n Germanic OV and VO languages in Broekhuis (2008: § 2.4; 2011). The main conclusions are the following. First, the change from the historical hybrid VO-OV systems\n to the rigid OV and VO systems of the present-day languages is due to changing the “setting” [±V‑to‑v] to the\n more categorical ones [−V-to-v] or [+V-to-v]. Second, the role of object shift in the diachronic\n development is modest; it is not involved in the development of the OV-languages at all and involves only the (partial) loss of\n object shift in the VO-languages (contra Struik et al.). Third, the encoding of the information-structural\n new-given distinction remains constant in that the interpretation of (un)scrambled nominal objects does not\n change over time (contra Struik & Schoenmakers).","PeriodicalId":53947,"journal":{"name":"Linguistic Variation","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2022-11-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Linguistic Variation","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1075/lv.22005.bro","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article sketches a new analysis of the diachronic development found in many West Germanic languages from a
hybrid VO-OV order to a rigid OV or VO order. The discussion departs from the discussions in Struik & Van Kemenade (2020/2022) and Struik & Schoenmakers (to appear) on the diachronic development of English/Dutch, which focus on the
role of object shift and information structure. My interpretation of their data will be based on an earlier analysis of the
Germanic OV and VO languages in Broekhuis (2008: § 2.4; 2011). The main conclusions are the following. First, the change from the historical hybrid VO-OV systems
to the rigid OV and VO systems of the present-day languages is due to changing the “setting” [±V‑to‑v] to the
more categorical ones [−V-to-v] or [+V-to-v]. Second, the role of object shift in the diachronic
development is modest; it is not involved in the development of the OV-languages at all and involves only the (partial) loss of
object shift in the VO-languages (contra Struik et al.). Third, the encoding of the information-structural
new-given distinction remains constant in that the interpretation of (un)scrambled nominal objects does not
change over time (contra Struik & Schoenmakers).
本文对许多西日耳曼语言从混合VO-OV顺序到刚性OV或VO顺序的历时发展进行了新的分析。该讨论偏离了Struik&Van Kemenade(2020/2022)和Struik&Schoenmakers(即将出现)关于英语/荷兰语历时发展的讨论,这些讨论侧重于对象转换和信息结构的作用。我对他们数据的解释将基于Broekhuis早期对日耳曼OV和VO语言的分析(2008年:§2.4;2011)。主要结论如下。首先,从历史上的混合VO-OV系统到当今语言的刚性OV和VO系统的变化是由于将“设置”[±V‑to‑V]改为更具类别性的[−V to V]或[+V to V'。第二,客体转换在历时发展中的作用是适度的;它根本不涉及OV语言的发展,只涉及VO语言中对象移位的(部分)损失(contra Struik et al.)。
期刊介绍:
Linguistic Variation is an international, peer-reviewed journal that focuses on the study of linguistic variation. It seeks to investigate to what extent the study of linguistic variation can shed light on the broader issue of language-particular versus language-universal properties, on the interaction between what is fixed and necessary on the one hand and what is variable and contingent on the other. This enterprise involves properly defining and delineating the notion of linguistic variation by identifying loci of variation. What are the variable properties of natural language and what is its invariant core?