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E-raamat: The Diachronic Typology of Non-Canonical Subjects

Edited by (University of Bergen), Edited by (Ghent University)
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This volume is an important contribution to the diachrony of non-canonical subjects in a typological perspective. The questions addressed concern the internal mechanisms and triggers for various changes that non-canonical subjects undergo, ranging from semantic motivations to purely structural explanations. The discussion encompasses the whole life-cycle of non-canonical subjects: from their emergence out of non-subject arguments to their expansion, demise or canonicization, focusing primarily on syntactic changes and changes in case-marking. The volume offers a number of different case studies comprising such languages as Italian, Spanish, Old Norse and Russian as well as languages less studied in this context, such as Latin, Classical Armenian, Baltic languages and some East Caucasian languages. Typological generalizations in the form of recurrent developmental paths are offered on the basis of data presented in this volume and in the literature.
List of contributors
vii
Introduction ix
Ilja A. Serzant
Chiara Fedriani
Leonid Kulikov
PART I Rise of non-canonical subjects or subject-like obliques
Non selected dative arguments in Spanish anticausative constructions: Exploring subjecthood
3(32)
Olga Fernandez-Soriano
Amaya Mendikoetxea
The rise of animacy-based differential subject marking in Dutch
35(20)
Helen de Hoop
The rise of oblique subjects in Russian
55(18)
Hakyung Jung
Non-canonical subject marking: Genitive subjects in Classical Armenian
73(18)
Daniel Kolligan
The rise of non-canonical subjects and semantic alignments in Hindi
91(30)
Annie Montaut
PART II Historical changes in constructions with non-canonical subjects or subject-like obliques
Experiencers and psychological noun predicates: From Latin to Italian
121(18)
Marina Benedetti
Between Finnic and Indo-European: Variation and change in the Estonian experiencer-object construction
139(24)
Liina Lindstrom
On the historical expansion of non-canonically marked `subjects' in Spanish
163(24)
Chantal Melis
Marcela Flores
PART III From non-canonical subjects or subject-like obliques to canonical subjects
Subjects in Scandinavian
187(16)
Jan Terje Faarlund
The me pudet construction in the history of Latin: why and how fast non-canonical subjects come and go
203(28)
Chiara Fedriani
Diachrony of experiencer subject marking: Evidence from East Caucasian
231(26)
Dmitry Ganenkov
Obliqueness, quasi-subjects and transitivity in Baltic and Slavonic
257(26)
Axel Holvoet
Rise of canonical subjecthood
283(30)
Ilja A. Serzant
Synthesis
The diachronic typology of non-canonical subjects and subject-like obliques
313(48)
Ilja A. Serzant
Language index 361(2)
Subject index 363