TY - JOUR
T1 - Objects, quasi -objects and oblique objects in Kakataibo (Panoan, Peru)
AU - Zariquiey, Roberto
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/10
Y1 - 2017/10
N2 - This paper discusses objecthood in Kakataibo (Panoan, Peru) by studying three different types of non-subject arguments in the language: objects of transitive predicates, quasi-objects, and oblique objects. Quasi-objects are similar to objects because of their lack of overt case marking, but they appear with intransitive predicates. Oblique objects also appear with some intransitive predicates but differ from objects and quasi-objects by carrying an indirect locative marker. Only objects of transitive predicates can control important object-based syntactic operations, such as object agreement and object switchreference, but objects, quasi-objects, and oblique objects can be reflexivized and reciprocalized. Adjuncts in Kakataibo cannot undergo either reflexivization or reciprocalization, and they are always morphologically marked. It is argued here that the existence of three different non-subject arguments in Kakataibo produces a continuum-like effect in the distinction between objects and adjuncts, and it reveals that objecthood in the language needs to be understood as a gradient and variable category.
AB - This paper discusses objecthood in Kakataibo (Panoan, Peru) by studying three different types of non-subject arguments in the language: objects of transitive predicates, quasi-objects, and oblique objects. Quasi-objects are similar to objects because of their lack of overt case marking, but they appear with intransitive predicates. Oblique objects also appear with some intransitive predicates but differ from objects and quasi-objects by carrying an indirect locative marker. Only objects of transitive predicates can control important object-based syntactic operations, such as object agreement and object switchreference, but objects, quasi-objects, and oblique objects can be reflexivized and reciprocalized. Adjuncts in Kakataibo cannot undergo either reflexivization or reciprocalization, and they are always morphologically marked. It is argued here that the existence of three different non-subject arguments in Kakataibo produces a continuum-like effect in the distinction between objects and adjuncts, and it reveals that objecthood in the language needs to be understood as a gradient and variable category.
KW - Kakataibo
KW - Objecthood
KW - Panoan
KW - Transitivity
KW - Valency
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85030094598&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/692977
DO - 10.1086/692977
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85030094598
SN - 0020-7071
VL - 83
SP - 719
EP - 741
JO - International Journal of American Linguistics
JF - International Journal of American Linguistics
IS - 4
ER -