Query on analytic causative verbs
John Newman
john.newman at UALBERTA.CA
Wed Mar 28 15:57:18 UTC 2012
Suzanne
A couple of examples of the sort you want (I think):
Jacaltec (Craig's Structure of Jacaltec 1977: 376)
(1) Tz'ayic x-'a'a-ni tajoj xil kape.
sun ASP-give-SUF to dry clothes
"The sun made the clothes dry."
Orizaba Nahuatl (Tuggy, in van Belle and van Langendonck's The Dative,Volume
1: Descriptive studies1996)
The -tia suffix covers the meanings of "give,causative""
(2a) ama-tia = paper-give = "give documents to X"
(2b) mik-tia = die-give = "kill"
(2c) patio-tia = expensive -give = "raise the price of"
John
On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 9:09 AM, Suzanne Kemmer <kemmer at rice.edu> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have been queried about something I wrote a long time ago, and I did not
> document the facts well enough to easily find more examples of a
> particular kind.
>
> Does anyone know of any languages in which the causative verb in an
> analytic causative construction
> is a verb literally meaning 'give'? The example I came across in
> fieldwork and mentioned in my
> paper with Arie Verhagen is: Luo MIYO 'give' which is used as an
> analytic causative verb.
>
> The easiest way to sum up the analytic causative construction I am talking
> about
> is: [ Causer V(of causation) Causee V (Patient) ] .
>
> Examples include English 'I made her laugh' and the French FAIRE
> causative.
>
> Case marking/grammatical relations of the participants can vary across
> languages; word order can vary. The second verb - the
> one with the variable lexical content, which expresses a predicate of
> result in this construction -- may or may not be finite, and if non-finite
> may or may not have an infinitive marker.
>
> The range of meanings of the construction should include 'X made Y do
> something'/ 'X caused Y to do something'.
>
> The reason:
> I am aware that some languages do not sharply distinguish 'strict
> causation' from
> other force dynamic configurations like allowing or ordering; such
> meanings are often found with such constructions as well as 'strict
> causation'.
> 'Strict causation', which I have often been told is the only
> interpretation of such constructions that is typologically relevant, means
> causation
> as logicians define it: The caused predicate follows the causing
> predicate (or its associated specific action) in time; and, supposedly, it
> would not have taken place had not X done something unspecified that is
> expressed schematically by the causing predicate.
> Since many linguists are most interested in this 'logical' causation, I
> wanted to make sure examples of the construction include the meaning 'make
> Y do'. Not just 'let Y do', 'order Y to do' , etc.
>
> Thanks for any help!
> Suzanne Kemmer
>
>
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