accusative and ergative languages

Adam Hyllested adahyl at cphling.dk
Wed Jul 21 16:59:02 UTC 1999


On Fri, 16 Jul 1999, Sean Crist wrote:

> Somebody (I've lost track of who) wrote:

>>> Yes, but if a new verb were formed, e.g. webben (from English 'web'), there
>>> is no possibility that it would be conjugated webben, wabb, gewobben.

> This sort of thing actually _does_ happen sometimes; it just isn't that
> common.  The English verb "strive" is a loan from Old French; but it is
> often declined as if it were an old Class I ablauting strong verb (strove,
> striven).  So I'd correct "no possibility" to "much less likely".

Another example is the Danish verb <skrive> "to write",
ultimately from latin <scribere>, but always conjugated as an
ablauting strong verb: pres. <skriver>, pret. <skrev> (and not
<**skrivede>. However, this way of conjugating is no longer productive.

Adam Hyllested



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