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Dear all,<br>
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I am interested in the following hypothesis:<br>
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In most of the world's languages, the PP "in my house" in sentence (1) and (2) are the same.<br>
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(1) My stone is in my house.<br>
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(2) I hide my stone in my house.<br>
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For example, in German:<br>
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(1) Mein Stein ist "in meinem Haus".<br>
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(2) Ich verstecke meinen Stein "in meinem Haus".<br>
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Although there are few languages where the PP of (1) and (2) are not identical, such as Finnish:<br>
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(1) Kiveni on "talossani". (Locative)<br>
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(2) Piilotan kiveni "talooni". (Illative)<br>
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But cases like Finnish are far fewer than English-like cases, I think.<br>
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I think this is interesting because the PP of (1) and that of (2) are semantically different: the PP in (1) is a location whereas that in PP is the endpoint of a placement event. If I can show that the two PPs are morphologically identical in most of the world's
languages, then I can suggest that placement event profiles a static location as its endpoint and not a dynamic goal, like Rohde has argued in her dissertation (<a href="https://scholarship.rice.edu/handle/1911/18015">https://scholarship.rice.edu/handle/1911/18015</a>)<br>
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Although I find this issue interesting, I would like to know if others find it so as well. What do you think? (Also, I would appreciate if anyone can let me know any other Finnish-like cases)<br>
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>From Hong Kong,<br>
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Ian Joo<br>
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<a href="http://ianjoo.academia.edu">http://ianjoo.academia.edu</a></div>
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