Linguistic Discovery
Dartmouth College

Volume 10 Issue 3 (2012)        DOI:10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.418

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Ditransitive Alignment and Referential Hierarchies in Araki

Alexandre François

LACITO-CNRS, Australian National University

Since Bossong (1985), referential hierarchies have proven useful in accounting for patterns of differential object marking (DOM) in mono‑transitive clauses. More recent studies (Siewierska 1998; Haspelmath 2005; Bickel 2008; papers in this volume) have also shown the relevance of such hierarchies in explaining the alignment patterns of ditransitive verbs – that is, how languages treat formally the Theme and the recipient or Goal. Araki, a highly endangered Oceanic language of Vanuatu, not only shows DOM with its transitive verbs, but is also sensitive to referential properties of arguments in its handling of ditransitive alignment. On a hierarchy defined by the features [±local] (i.e. speech-act participant) and [±human], the higher-ranking participant receives the status of object, while the other one is demoted to a peripheral role. The result is a pattern of regular alternation between indirective and secundative alignment, depending on the relative properties of the Theme and the Goal. The present article will describe these patterns, and discuss cases of variation. Ultimately, rules of ditransitive alignment in Araki can be explained functionally as a competition between non-agent participants on a scale of affectedness.

1. Introduction

1.1 General background

A number of authors – including Dryer (1986), Haspelmath (2005, 2011), Malchukov et al . (2010) – have highlighted the parallelism between two problems of syntactic typology: monotransitive alignment and ditransitive alignment.[1] First, monotransitive alignment is concerned by which of the two arguments of a (mono)transitive clause (A the agent, P the patient) will be formally treated like the sole argument of an intransitive clause (S). As for the study of ditransitive alignment , it is concerned with the two non-agent arguments of a three-participant clause, namely the theme (T) and the recipient or goal (G); the question raised, this time, is which of these two arguments (T or G) will align with P, the sole non-agent argument of the monotransitive clause.

If the participant aligning with P is the Theme, we have an indirect object construction , or indirective alignment. This pattern – of the type She gave water to the guests – is typologically the most common (Haspelmath 2011). Yet in many languages, the participant that aligns with the patient is the Goal, as in She provided the guests with water : this defines secundative alignment. A third possible alignment type, called double-object construction or neutral alignment, consists for both T and G to be aligned with P, as in English She gave them water (Malchukov et al . 2010).

Languages of the world differ greatly in their strategies for encoding three-participant verbs – the focus of the present volume. Some follow one alignment type consistently, whether indirective, secundative, or neutral. Other languages show mixed systems, with more or less regular alternation between alignment types, depending on various possible criteria. Relevant factors may have to do with the lexical semantics of the verb; or, say, with the morphological realisation of arguments (e.g. pronouns versus noun phrases). But in many cases, crucial parameters include the referential properties of these arguments, i.e. those semantic features that are inherent to the referents themselves: e.g. definiteness, specificity, number, animacy, person. The present study will precisely focus on Araki, a language in which the syntax of ditransitive alignment follows complex yet regular split patterns, depending on the referential properties of its arguments.

1.2 The case of Araki

Araki is an Oceanic (Austronesian) language spoken on the small island of the same name, off Espiritu Santo island in Vanuatu. With only eight speakers left, Araki is a moribund language: a number of social factors in the 20th century have resulted in Araki islanders shifting to the neighbouring language Tangoa (Vari-Bogiri 2005). Araki has been the object of a grammatical description, a dictionary and a collection of texts (François 2002, 2008). The present article builds on data collected by the author in 1997-1998 and 2011, with the last speakers of the language.

One of the particularities of Araki is the syntactic treatment it gives to different kinds of participants, both in its mono‑transitive and ditransitive constructions. The present paper will compare the encoding of Patients in two-participant construc‑tions with the morpho‑syntactic treatment of Themes and Goals in three-participant constructions. I will highlight the contribution of two major parameters underlying these constructions: first, the nature of lexical verb classes; second, the referential properties of participants, including humanness, anaphori‑city, and person.

In the discussion, I will use the terms Patient, Theme and Goal in accordance with the generalised role model proposed by Bickel and Nichols (2009) and Bickel (2010). According to this approach, a two-participant event defines an agent-like (A) and a non-agent-like or patient-like (P) participant. A three-participant event involves an A and two non-agent-like participants. For the latter, a basic distinction is assumed between a manipulated participant, the Theme (T), and a stationary participant, the Goal (G). In principle, the label ‘G’ encompasses locational goals as well as (human) recipients.

In a nutshell, I will first show that Araki treats the P of monotransitive clauses in two different ways, according to its referential properties; this is a classic case of Differential object marking (Bossong 1985). Three-participant clauses also show a formal split between two constructions, namely the secundative vs the indirective. This alternation, which is only observed with a small set of ditransitive verbs, is driven by the intrinsic properties of G and T, and their relative position on a hierarchy of referential properties. Overall, the factors determining the encoding of mono‑transitive Patients overlap with those that condition the encoding of ditransitive Themes and Goals: in both cases, one can define a scale of saliency in which more salient referents (speech-act participants, human and/or definite specific referents) outrank less salient ones. Ultimately, building upon Næss (2007), I will propose to correlate these formal distinctions of Araki with the degree of affectedness of non-agent participants.

1.3 Outline

The paper is organised as follows. I start out, in section 2, with a brief overview of some relevant major characteristics of Araki grammar. Section 3 discusses the encoding of P in two-participant constructions; I’ll show that differential P-marking affects verbal indexation (with most verbs) and prepositional flagging (with some verbs). Both types of argument marking are in turn dependent on the referential properties of P, in terms of humanness, anaphoricity, and specificity.

Section 4 addresses the encoding of T and G in three-participant constructions. What we find here is a basic distinction between three common ditransitive verbs (‘give’, ‘show’, ‘tell’) on the one hand, and other verbs that semantically imply three participants. Whereas the latter group of verbs always show indirective alignment (T aligns with P), the former three verbs, in contrast, exhibit an alterna‑tion between indirective alignment (T aligns with P) and secundative alignment (G aligns with P). This alternation is driven by the competition between T and G for the status of object; it depends on the relative referential properties of T and G, in terms of a hierarchy that involves the dimensions of humanness and person.

Finally, Section 5 will discuss these results, and propose a functional explanation in terms of affectedness. In particular, I will address the question of why only ‘give’, ‘show’, and ‘tell’, but not other verbs, show this reference-sensitive alternation in their patterns of ditransitive alignment.

2. Overview of Clause Syntax in Araki

The grammar of Araki was first described by François (2002). I will only refer here to those points which will be relevant for the later discussion on ditransitive verbs.

2.1 Parts of speech and subject clitics

The main parts of speech of Araki include nouns, locatives, numerals, verbs, and adjectives. The first two of these are directly predicative: they form direct predicates, with no copula.[2]

(1)

P̈ir̄a

hosu

naivou-kuPRED.

 

woman

that

 wife-my

 

‘That woman is my wife.’

(2)

M̈a‑ku

ai

kesiPRED.

 

POSS:DRINK-1s

water

here

 

‘My (glass of) water is here.’

When they form the head of a predicate, verbs are accompanied by clitics. While tense-aspect-polarity clitics are optional, the subject-and-mood proclitic is obligatory. This is a portmanteau morpheme which indexes the mood value of the clause (Realis vs Irrealis) as well as the subject of the predicate:

(3)

Nam =

r̄oho

=r̄o

kesi.

 

1s:R

stay

IPFV

here

 

‘I live here.’

Table 1 lists the subject proclitics for Realis and Irrealis (François 2002:44).

 

Realis

Irrealis

 

SING

PLUR

SING

PLUR

1INC

 

jam=

 

jo=

1EXC

nam=

kam=

na=

kam̈a=

2

om=

ham=

o=

ha=

3

mo=

mo=

jo=

ha=

Table 1: Proclitics indexing subject and mood

These subject-and-mood proclitics do not take exclusively verbs under their scope: they also combine with a number of predicative parts of speech, including numerals (e.g. rua ‘two’ in (63) below); nouns in some contexts; and adjectives. However, each of these categories have morpho‑syntactic properties that distinguish them from verbs (François 2002:33 sqq.). Table 2 summarises some of these properties, including the possibility to form a predicate, or modify a noun, with versus without a subject-mood proclitic. The present study will focus on verbal clauses.

 

VERB

NUMERAL

ADJECTIVE

NOUN

LOCATIVE

predicate
     with Sbj clitic

+

+

+

+

noun modifier
     with Sbj clitic

+

predicate
     without Sbj clitic

+

+

noun modifier
     without Sbj clitic

+

+

+

Table 2: Properties of main parts of speech in Araki

2.2 Syntax of verbal clauses

Araki shows nominative-accusative alignment: the subject S of its intransitive clauses aligns with the A of transitive clauses. Compare (4) with (3) above.

(4)

Nam =

je

var̄i‑a.

 

1s:R

NEG

take‑3s:OBJ

 

‘I didn't take it.’

The order of clausal elements in Araki is strictly SVO (SV, AVO). Non-core arguments and adjuncts follow the object.

(5)

Nra

mo=

heli‑a

koko

lo

jar̄auta.

 

3pl

3:R

dig-3s:OBJ

hole

LOC

shore

 

‘They dug a hole on the shore.’

Section 3 below will present the morpho‑syntax of transitive clauses in more detail.

Araki has two patterns of verb serialisation. One, akin to verb compounding, is nuclear-layer serialisation (cf. Foley and Olson 1985). A sequence of two verbs behaves morpho‑logically like a single verb, insofar as they index their subject and object only once:

(6)

Na=

pa=

p̈isu

jurungi‑a

aka‑ja.

 

1s:Irr

FUT

prick

pierce-3s:OBJ

canoe-1inc:pl

 

‘I'm going to make a hole in our boat!’

The other pattern, named “clause chaining” by François (2002:189-199), corres‑ponds to Foley and Olson's core-layer serialisation. What are serialised are not just verb stems, but entire verb phrases, each of which encodes its own arguments:

(7)

Ha=

var̄i‑a

ha=

m̈a!

 

2pl:Irr

take‑3s:OBJ

2pl:Irr

come

 

‘Bring it here!’

This form of serialisation, highly frequent in discourse, will be mentioned again briefly in §3.2 and §4.1.

3. The Encoding Of Patients in Two-Participant Constructions

3.1 Patients encoded as core arguments

With most two-participant verbs, the Patient is treated as a core argument. This particular combination (non-agent-like participant in a transitive clause + core argument) defines the syntactic function of (direct) object in this language. This contrasts with non-core arguments, which will be described in §3.2.

OBJECT OTHER THAN THIRD PERSON

When the object is other than 3rd person, it normally takes the form of a weak object pronoun, which is realised as a suffix on the verb. This is the case with 1sg, 2sg and 1incl.pl objects:

(8)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi-á.

 

wife-my

3:R=

like-1s.OBJ

 

‘My wife likes me.’

(9)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi-ko.

 

wife-my

3:R=

like-2s.OBJ

 

‘My wife likes you.’

(10)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi-ja.

 

wife-my

3:R=

like-1in:pl.OBJ

 

‘My wife likes us.’

Table 3 lists all the pronominal suffixes of Araki, both verbal and nominal – as both will be relevant to our forthcoming discussions, especially §3.2. Note that the paradigm of verbal suffixes is defective: for two persons in the plural (1ex:pl, 2pl), the object takes the form of a free pronoun in a full NP slot, as in (17) below.

 

VERBAL SUFFIXES

 

NOMINAL SUFFIXES

 

(object of verbs +
object of verb-like prepositions)

 

(possessor of nouns +
object of noun-like prepositions)

 

SING

PLUR

 

SING

PLUR

1INC

 

‑ja

   

‑ja

1EXC

‑á

 

‑ku

‑m̈am

2

‑ko

 

‑m

‑m̈im

3

‑a

‑ra

 

‑na

‑ra

Table 3: Verbal vs nominal pronominal suffixes in Araki

Araki has regular penultimate stress; when stress is irregular, it is marked in the orthography with a diacritic. This is relevant for the contrast between the object suffixes for 3sg and 1sg, which are respectively /‑a/ (with regular stress on previous syllable) vs /‑á/ (with unpredictable final stress): e.g. r̄ueni‑a [rueˈni.a] ‘help him/her’ vs r̄ueni‑á [rueniˈa] ‘help me’.

THIRD PERSON OBJECTS

When the object is 3rd person, its encoding depends on its referential properties in terms of anaphoricity and humanness.

When a 3rd person object is topical and activated, it is expressed by a weak object pronoun, whether it is human or not. Both 3sg /‑a/ and 3pl /‑ra/ are under‑specified with respect to gender or animacy:

(11)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi-a.

 

wife-my

3:R=

like-3s.OBJ

 

‘My wife likes him ~ her ~ it.’

(12)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi-ra.

 

wife-my

3:R=

like-3p:OBJ

 

‘My wife likes them.’

When the object is not topical or activated, it takes the form of a full noun phrase. In this case, a formal split is drawn between human and non-human referents. A [‑human] NP object is indexed on the verb by an agreement suffix which inflects for number – see (13)‑(14), and also (5)‑(6) above:

(13)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi-a

hija-m.

 

wife-my

3:R

like-3s:OBJ

name-your

 

‘My wife likes your name.’

(14)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi-ra

p̈ep̈e.

 

wife-my

3:R

like-3p:OBJ

butterfly

 

‘My wife likes butterflies.’

These agreement suffixes are the same as the 3rd person weak object pronouns of (11)‑(12), and will be glossed here in the same way; however, agreement suffixes only occur with [‑human] NPs. By contrast, [+human] NP objects do not trigger agreement on the verb:

(15)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi‑Ø

naivou-m.

 

wife-my

3:R

like-Ø

wife-your

 

‘My wife likes your wife.’

(16)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi‑Ø

Sera.

 

wife-my

3:R

like-Ø

Sarah

 

‘My wife likes Sarah.’

(17)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

poi‑Ø

kam̈im.

 

wife-my

3:R

like-Ø

2pl:INDEP

 

‘My wife likes you guys.’

This encoding of objects depending on the feature [±human] will be relevant later, in §4.4. Even though this is a classic case of differential object marking (Lazard 1984, Bossong 1985), the fact that [+human] vs [‑human] Ps are associated respectively with zero vs non-zero markers runs counter to cross-linguistic expecta‑tions. The typo‑logically more common pattern is for more salient referents to be overtly indexed (Siewierska 2004). However, Siewierska (2004: 150) shows that this generalisation is much stronger for A than for P arguments, and she in fact identifies several languages that exhibit agreement only with less salient P‑argu‑ments. This finding is in line with diachronic studies, showing that in some languages the develop‑ment of P-agreement starts off with more salient P-types, but in others with less salient Ps (Van Gelderen 2011).[3]

3.2 Patients encoded as non-core arguments

Non-core arguments in Araki, regardless of their semantic role, are flagged by means of prepositions. In what follows, I shall focus on three prepositions, namely lo ‘locative’, (i)n(i) ‘oblique’, and (i)sa ‘dative’, as they will be relevant to the discussion on three-participant constructions.

A NOTE ON THE MORPHOLOGY OF ARAKI PREPOSITIONS

The two prepositions (i)n(i) and (i)sa show free variation with and without a vowel i, e.g. ini‑a = ni‑a ‘of him~it’; isa‑ku = sa‑ku ‘to me’. These alternations are optional, and will be irrelevant to this study.

Some prepositions, including lo ‘locative’, always occur as a fixed form followed by an NP, and never inflect. By contrast, other prepositions may take pronominal dependents as their object. They inflect for person and number in two distinct ways (François 2002:158):

  • “Verb-like prepositions”, including (i)n(i) ‘oblique’, take the same object suffixes as verbs (Table 3) – e.g. (i)ni‑á <OBL‑1s> ‘of me’, (i)ni‑ko <OBL‑2s> ‘of you’, (i)ni‑a <OBL‑3s> ‘of him’, etc.
  • “Noun-like prepositions”, including (i)sa ‘dative’, take the same possessive suffixes (Table 3) as inalienably possessed nouns – e.g. (i)sa‑ku <DAT‑1s> ‘to me’, (i)sa‑m <DAT‑2s> ‘to you’, (i)sa‑na <DAT‑3s> ‘to him’, etc.

The two types of prepositions also behave differently when they combine with a full Noun Phrase. A verb-like preposition appears in its bare form, followed directly by its dependent. The oblique preposition (i)n(i) is thus sometimes reduced to a single consonant – as in (21) nnar̄u‑m.

A noun-like preposition, by contrast, will take a “construct suffix (CSTR)” ‑n. When suffixed to a possessed noun, the ‑n is found on the head of a possessive phrase to mark it as possessed by the following NP:[4]

(18)

nar̄u‑n

moli

 

son‑CSTR

chief

 

‘the son of the chief’

In the same way, this head-marking construct suffix appears on noun-like preposi‑tions when their object is a Noun Phrase:

(19)

sa‑n

moli

 

DATIVE‑CSTR

chief

 

‘to the chief’

In sum, the dative preposition has the form (i)sa when followed by a pronominal suffix (isa‑ku, isa‑m, isa‑na…), and (i)sa‑n when followed by an NP.

OBLIQUE AND LOCATIVE MARKED PATIENTS

With some two-participant verbs, the P argument is encoded in a preposition phrase rather than an object. These cases correspond to what Dixon and Aikhenvald (2000) name “extended intransitives”, and will be identified here as “non-core Patient”. Incidentally, the prepositional marking of P suspends the possibility of triggering verbal agreement.

The choice of the preposition depends partly on the lexical verb: some require a dative argument (see below), while others require an oblique (i)n(i) or a locative lo preposition. For the latter category of verbs, the choice of the right preposition depends, this time, on the referential properties of P.

The preposition (i)n(i), glossed as ‘oblique’, introduces P if it is a pronoun (human or not), a proper noun, or a common noun that is [+human] [+specific]:

(20)

M̈ar̄a

r̄ungana

hosu

mo=

les~les

te

ni‑ra.

 

since

time

that

3:R

look~RECIP

bad

OBL‑3p

 

‘Since that time, they have always hated each other.’ [lit. looked bad at each other]

(21)

Nam=

lolokoru

n

nar̄u‑m.

 

1s:R

be.angry

OBL

son-2s

 

‘I'm angry at your son.’

The preposition lo ‘locative’[5] introduces the non-core Patient when it is an NP headed by a common noun, whether human or not:

(22)

Nam=

vaver̄e

lo

ver̄e

mo=

hese.

 

1s:R

sing

LOC

song

3:R

one

 

‘I sang a song.’

Note that the domains of use of (i)n(i) and lo intersect. When a common noun is [+human] [+specific], there is free variation in the choice of preposition, with no semantic difference (see also (46) below):

(23)

Nam=

lolokoru

n

r̄ap̈ala‑m.

 

1s:R

be.angry

OBL

friend-2s

(23’)

Nam=

lolokoru

lo

r̄ap̈ala‑m.

 

1s:R

be.angry

LOC

friend-2s

 

‘I'm angry at your friend.’

DATIVE-MARKED PATIENTS

Finally, some two-participants verbs encode P with the noun‑like preposition (i)sa ‘Dative’. Dative-marked Ps are always [+human] and they cannot be indexed on the verb.

(24)

Nra

mo=

re

ha=

v̈alum

isa‑m̈am.

 

3pl

3:R

say

3p:Irr

fight

DAT-1ex:pl

 

‘They want to fight with us.’

Dative-marked Ps are often associated with motion verbs. The spatial meaning can be literal or figurative:[6]

(25)

Sava

hina

jo=

pa=

m̈a

isa‑m?

 

what

thing

3s:Irr

FUT

come

DAT-2s

 

‘What will happen to you?’ [lit. what will come to you]

In a sentence like (26), the serialised motion verb sna ‘come’ is optional. In such a case, the dative-marked P can be analysed as an argument of ‘speak’, or of ‘come’, or of the whole construction:

(26)

O=

pa=

le=

sorosoro

(jo=

sna)

sa‑ku

ngisa?

 

2s:Irr

FUT

again

speak

(3s:Irr

come)

DAT-1s

when

 

‘When will you talk to me again?’ [lit. you talk it comes to me when?]

3.3 Summary

Table 4 summarises the various ways in which two-participant clauses encode their Patients in Araki. In each box, ‘A=’ refers to the subject-and-mood proclitic (Table 1) that precedes the verb; P refers to the Patient argument, whether it takes the form of a suffix (PSFX) or a full NP (PNP). The dotted line in the middle column indicates that there is free variation between two strategies for that specific confi‑guration [see (23)‑(23’)].

nature of P

OBJECT

OBL / LOC

DATIVE

pronoun

A= V‑PSFX

A= V (i)ni‑PSFX

A= V (i)sa‑PSFX

proper noun

A= V PNP

A= V (i)n(i) PNP

A= V (i)sa‑n PNP

common noun [+human] [+spec]

A= V lo PNP

common noun [+human] [‑spec]

common noun [‑human]

A= V‑AGR PNP

Table 4: Summary: Morphosyntax of Patients in monotransitive clauses

4. The Encoding Of Themes and Goals in Three-Participant Constructions

As stated in the introduction, I call ditransitive verbs those verbs which subcategorise for three participants: one agent (A) and two other arguments, called the Theme (T) and the Goal (G). Throughout the following sections, bold typeface in examples will highlight the Theme.

The previous section on two-participant events showed that a patient-like participant P could be expressed as a core argument; as an oblique or locative; or as a dative argument. Crucially, a verb can have no more than one argument on any of these positions. This means that a three-participant verb in Araki cannot encode its two non-agent participant as two equally ranked objects in a double object construction; in other words, ditransitive alignment in this language cannot be of the neutral type (§1.1). Only one of these two arguments T and G can access the syntactic status of object. As we will see, the competition is sometimes won by T, sometimes by G. In each case, the argument that did not make it to the object slot is given a peripheral status, in the form of a prepositional phrase – whether oblique or dative.

4.1 Two classes of three-participant verbs

Three-participant verbs in Araki can be classified into two classes, depending on how they map semantic roles onto syntactic functions. The first class shows fixed mapping of its arguments onto syntactic functions; the second class shows regular alternation between two patterns.

FIXED MAPPING

Some verbs do the mapping in a fixed way, with no syntactic variation. They all show indirective alignment (§1.1), insofar as they treat the Theme as a syntactic object, in the sense defined in §3.1. In other words, these verbs always align T with the core-argument P of default two-participant constructions.

An example of a lexical item with fixed mapping is sohani ‘send’. Examples (27) and (28) show that T is always the object, regardless of its referential properties such as animacy or humanness.

(27)

Na=

pa=

sohani-ko

sa-n

r̄am̈a‑ku.

 

1s:Irr

FUT

send-2s:OBJ

DAT‑CSTR

father-1s

 

‘I'll send youT to my father.’

(28)

Na=

pa=

sohani-a

leta

mo=

hese

isa-m.

 

1s:Irr

FUT

send-3s:OBJ

letter

3s:R

one

DAT‑2s

 

‘I'll send a letterT to you.’

For these verbs, the Goal G is encoded as a non-core complement. If G refers to a location (as per the broad definition given of G in §1.2), it takes the form of a locative phrase. If it is a place name, it is constructed directly; if it is a common noun, it is introduced by the locative preposition lo:

(29)

Kam=

sohani‑ko

Vila.

 

1exc.pl:R

send-2s:OBJ

(place)

 

‘We're sending you to Port Vila.’

(30)

Kam=

sohani‑ko

lo

skul.

 

1exc.pl:R

send-2s:OBJ

LOC

school

 

‘We're sending you to school.’

If the goal G is human, the preposition used is (i)sa‑ ‘DATIVE’, as in (27) and (28).

Other examples of verbs belonging to this class include r̄usan ‘release, give away’ and hashaso ‘praise, recommend’:

(31)

Nam=

r̄usan

venar̄u‑ku

(mo=

v̈a)

isa-m.

 

1s:R

release

daughter-1s

3:R

go

DAT‑2s

 

‘I'm giving my daughter away to you.’

(32)

Mo=

hashaso

lam̈ane

ne

sa-ku.

 

3:R

praise

boy

that

DAT‑1s

 

‘They recommended that boy to me.’

As is frequently the case with Datives (see §3.2), the main verb is optionally followed by a serialised directional verb (see also (31)):

(27’)

Na=

pa=

sohani-ko

(o=

pa=

v̈a)

sa-n

r̄am̈a‑ku.

 

1s:Irr

FUT

send-2s:OBJ

(2s:Irr

FUT

go)

DAT‑CSTR

father-1s

 

‘I'll send youT (you'll go) to my father.’

It could be a matter of debate whether the dative arguments of (31) and (27’) are really arguments of the first verb (r̄usan, sohani), or of the directional verb that follows. One reason to support the first of these two hypotheses is that the motion verb is optional; and even when it is absent, the dative argument is required. In other words, the main verb subcategorises for A, T and G. Following a serialising pattern which is highly productive in Araki (François 2002: 193) and in other Oceanic languages (cf. Margetts 2007:91), this main verb is typically followed by a directional verb (go, come, descend…), which in turn subcategorises for a subject S and a goal G. This is simply a case of argument sharing in a serial verb construction, and should not change the analysis of r̄usan and sohani as three-participant verbs. The directional verb does not bring any new participant to the clause, which explains its optional status in Araki.

DIFFERENTIAL MAPPING

Among the set of three-participant verbs, three lexical verbs show regular variation with regard to whether T or G is the object. These verbs are:

 

sle(i)

‘give s.t./s.o. to s.o.’

 

vse(i)

‘show ~ teach s.t./s.o. to s.o.’

 

varai

‘mention ~ reveal s.t./s.o. to s.o.; tell s.o. s.t.’

For these three verbs, the Goal is always human (or treated as such: see §4.4.3). The prototypical configuration is that the Theme is [‑human]. This is by far the most frequent in natural discourse: in my 1997 corpus of spontaneous speech, out of 26 clauses featuring these verbs, 24 had a [‑human] theme, i.e. 92.3%.

In that prototypical case, the rule is that the semantic Goal has object status, while the Theme appears in a prepositional phrase – either with oblique (i)n(i) or locative lo, following the same rules as oblique Patients (cf. §3.2). This pattern, known as secundative alignment (§1.1), is illustrated in (33) and (34):

(33)

Naivou-kuA

mo=

sle

mara

variriG

lo

hanhanT.

 

wife-my

3:R=

give

child

small:PL

LOC

food

 

‘My wife has given the kids their food.’

(34)

Na=

pa=

varai

TaG

ini aT.

 

1s:Irr =

FUT

tell

Dad

OBL-3s

 

‘I'll tell Dad about it.’

In this particular context, the reverse alignment would be ungrammatical:

(34’)

*Na=

pa=

varai‑aT

sa‑n

TaT.

 

1s:Irr=

FUT

tell-3s:OBJ

DAT-CSTR

Dad

 

*‘I'll tell Dad about it.’

While the indirective alignment is the only one possible for the verbs showing fixed mapping (§4.1), the three verbs sle(i), vse(i) and varai have the particularity to alternate between secundative (Object=G) and indirective (Object=T) alignment.

The way these same verbs form Indirective alignment is formally parallel to what we saw in (27)‑(28) above: T is the object, and G appears in a prepositional phrase using Dative (i)sa:

(35)

Na=

pa=

sle

‑koT

sa-n

r̄am̈ar̄eG!

 

1s:Irr=

FUT

give

-2s:OBJ

DAT-CSTR

monster

 

‘I will give you to a monster!’

(36)

Na=

pa=

varai

‑koT

sa-n

TaG!

 

1s:Irr=

FUT

tell

-2s:OBJ

DAT-CSTR

Dad

 

‘I'll tell Dad about you.’

In this particular context, the reverse alignment would be ungrammatical:

(36’)

*Na=

pa=

varai

TaG

ini koT.

 

1s:I=

FUT

tell

Dad

OBL-2s

*‘I'll tell Dad about you.’

In sum, these three verbs show variation in the way they assign syntactic functions to their non-agent participants:

 

sometimes the object is G [secundative alignment],
while T is encoded as an oblique phrase, using (i)n(i) or lo;

 
 

sometimes the object is T [indirective alignment],
while G is encoded as a dative phrase, using (i)sa.

 

According to Jauncey (2010:245), the neighbouring language Tamambo shows free variation between the two strategies, for the same verbs. By contrast, Araki shows grammatical restrictions on which strategy should be used, depending on the nature of its arguments.

François (2002:161) pointed out the key role played in this alternation by the criterion of humanness of the Theme:

 

If the Theme is [‑human] as in (33), it is encoded as an oblique argument while the Goal is a core argument.

 
 

If the Theme is [+human] as in (35), it is treated as a core argument, while the Goal is encoded as a dative.

 

In other terms, Araki takes into account the humanness of its non-agent participants in the coding not only of two-participant constructions (§3.3) but also of those with three participants – even though the application and effect of this semantic factor are distinct in the two construction types.

4.2 A referential hierarchy

While the analysis in terms of humanness fit well with the initial corpus I had collected in 1997, new research conducted in 2011 revealed that this feature is not the only criterion that underlies the syntactic alternation of the three ditransitive verbs sle(i), vse(i) and varai. The second ingredient is the hierarchy of PERSON – more precisely, the contrast between the speech act participants or local persons (i.e. 1st and 2nd person) and the non-local (i.e. 3rd) person referents (Andrews 2007).

The person scale can be formulated as in 〈H1〉:

〈H1〉

[+local] person (1st or 2nd) > [‑local] person (3rd person)

Because the whole scale 〈H1〉 involves human referents, it can easily be combined with the contrast in humanness, in the form of the referential hierarchy 〈H2〉:

〈H2〉

[+human] [+local] > [+human] [‑local] > [‑human]

The hierarchy that obtains, based on person and animacy, is consistent with the referential hierarchies developed in linguistic typology since Silverstein (1976), which are the object of the present volume.

As the evidence below will show, the criteria determining the alignment of three-participant constructions in Araki are not the referential properties of T alone, but their relative position with respect to G on the referential hierarchy 〈H2〉. Specifically, I claim that the choice of construction is governed by the following rules:

(37)

If G ranks higher than T on the referential hierarchy,
then G is the object, and T is encoded as an oblique.

(38)

If T ranks higher than G on the referential hierarchy,
then T is the object, and G is encoded as a dative.

Or, to put it more simply:

(39)

The participant ranking higher on the referential hierarchy 〈H2〉 has the status of object; the other participant is encoded as a peripheral argument.

Incidentally, because it never happens that both G and T are [‑human], a corollary of (39) is that the object of these three ditransitive verbs is always [+human]. This contrasts with a fixed-mapping verb such as send, whose object is sometimes inanimate as in (28) above.

Compared to François (2002) which had defined the importance of the feature [human], the principal finding of the 2011 follow-up research was to highlight also the role played by the feature [local], and place the referential hierarchy 〈H2〉, together with the rule (39), at the heart of the system.

Section 4.3 will examine those cases when T and G have different ranking on the referential scale 〈H2〉; we shall see that the principle (39) is then always verified. In turn, Section 4.4 will address cases when T and G have equal ranking, and see that no systematic principle can then be identified. Each in its own way, these two configura‑tions will confirm the validity of the referential hierarchy.

4.3 When T and G have different ranking

I will begin with cases in which T is higher than G on the 〈H2〉 scale. In a configuration like show you to him, T is 2nd person, while G is 3rd person. In this case, T ranks higher than G, and therefore is the object:

(40)

Na=

pa=

vsei

‑koT

sa-n

TaG.

 

1s:I=

FUT

show

-2s:OBJ

DAT-CSTR

Dad

 

‘I will show you to Dad.’

(41)

O=

kan

slei

‑áT

sa‑naG!

 

2s:I=

PROH

give

-1s:OBJ

DAT-3s

 

‘Don't give me to him!’

The reverse alignment would be ungrammatical:

(40’)

*Na=

pa=

vse

TaG

ini‑ koT .

 

1s:I=

FUT

show

Dad

OBL-2s

(41’)

*O=

kan

slei

‑aG

ini‑ áT!

 

2s:I=

PROH

give

-3s:OBJ

OBL-1s

Examples like (40), or (35) above, were initially explained by the tentative hypo‑thesis that a human Theme is automatically promoted to object position. However, if the referential values of T and G are reversed, as in (42), G becomes the object. Indeed, even though T is [+human], it is non-local (3rd person) while G is local (2nd person). Because G ranks higher than T on the referential hierarchy 〈H2〉, it has object status, and T remains prepositional:

(42)

Na=

pa=

vsei

koG

ini‑aT.

 

1s:I=

FUT

show

-2s:OBJ

OBL‑3s

 

‘I will show him to you.’

As the following examples show, T is introduced sometimes by the oblique preposition (i)n(i), sometimes by the locative lo, in exactly the same conditions as defined earlier with oblique Patients (see §3.3).

(43)

Om=

je

m̈is

varai

‑á

ini‑aT.

 

2s:R=

NEG

yet

tell

-1s:OBJ

OBL-3s

 

‘You haven't told me yet about her.’

 

→ [+pronoun]

(44)

O=

kan

slei

á

n

GremT,

o=

slei

á

n

VevutiT.

 

2s:I=

PROH

give

-1s:OBJ

OBL

G.

2s:I=

give

-1s.OBJ

OBL

V.

 

( child adoption) ‘Don't give me Graham, give me Vevuti.’

 

→ [+proper noun]

(45)

O=

kan

slei

á

lo

lam̈aneT,

o=

slei

á

lo

p̈ir̄aT.

 

2s:I=

PROH

give

-1s:OBJ

LOC

male

2s:I=

give

-1s.OBJ

LOC

female

 

‘Don't give me a boy, give me a girl.’

 

→ [+common noun] [+human] [‑specific]

Just like we saw for (23)‑(23’) above, there is free variation between the two prepositions when, and only when, T is a common noun that is both human and specific:

(46)

Na=

pa=

vsei

ko

n

r̄ap̈ala‑ku

mo=

heseT.

 

1s:I=

FUT

show

-2s:OBJ

OBL

friend-1s

3:R

one

(46’)

Na=

pa=

vsei

ko

lo

r̄ap̈ala‑ku

mo=

heseT.

 

1s:I=

FUT

show

-2s:OBJ

LOC

friend-1s

3:R

one

 

‘I will show you one of my friends.’

 

→ [+common noun] [+human] [+specific]

Overall, when the person values of the two non-agent participants involve a contrast between a local and a non-local person, the results are robust. The LOCAL person (whether it is the Theme or the Goal) takes priority for the syntactic status of object, while the non-local person is expressed in a prepositional phrase. Swapping the person values of T and G entails a change of alignment, so as to respect the hierarchy {LOCAL > NON-LOCAL}:

(47)

O=

pa=

vsei

áT

〈sa‑na〉G?

 

2s:Irr=

FUT

show

-1s:OBJ

DAT‑3s

 

‘Will you show me to her?’

(47’)

O=

pa=

vsei

áG

ini‑aT?

 

2s:Irr=

FUT

show

-1s:OBJ

OBL‑3s

 

‘Will you show her to me?’

As was already clear from the initial description of the alternation pattern (§4.1), the results are also robust when the two non-agent participants differ in humanness. Given that G is necessarily [+human] with sle(i), vse(i) and varai (§4.1.2), the only case when such discrepancy occurs is when T is [‑human]; this case always triggers secundative alignment:

(48)

O=

vsei

‑áG

lo

pla‑m

toT!

 

2s:I=

show

-1s:OBJ

LOC

FARMING-2s

chicken

 

‘Show me your chickens!’

(49)

O=

slei

‑áG

iniaT!

 

2s:I=

give

-1s:OBJ

OBL-3s

 

‘Give it to me!’

Finally, while (47’) above confirmed that a [+human] [‑local] participant (here ‘her’) ranks lower than a local person, (50) shows it ranks higher than a [‑human] referent.

(50)

O=

pa=

vsei

‑aG

ini‑aT?

 

2s:Irr=

FUT

show

-3s:OBJ

OBL‑3s

 

‘Will you show it to her?’

Even though both suffixes /‑a/ refer to a 3rd person and could therefore be ambiguous, the oblique preposition ini can only introduce the Theme in a secundative construction, and this entails that the verb's object is the Goal. In other words, [+human] [‑local] participants have a medial position in the referential scale, as represented in the scale 〈H2〉 above.

4.4 When T and G have equal ranking

Whenever T and G belong to two distinct categories on the hierarchy 〈H2〉, speakers show virtually no hesitation or variation; the observed correla‑tions are systematic. But what happens when the two arguments belong to the same category?

Before addressing this point, I should emphasise that the relevant data are based on a limited corpus, and on elicitation. The possibility of testing these configura‑tions with natural data was hampered by their rarity in spontaneous speech and in narrative corpora (§4.1). First, human themes in three-participant constructions are extremely rare, and show seldom in spontaneous discourse. Second, the alignment alternation concerns only three verbs, and among these, the verb sle ’give’ was reluctantly accepted in combination with human Themes – speakers idiomatically prefer to use r̄usan ‘release’ (§4.1) for when a person is being “given” to someone, as in marriage arrangements or adoption practices. Combining sle ‘give’ with a human theme was thus unnatural in the first place, which made it difficult to test these constructions in natural discourse. The verbs vsei ‘show’ and varai ‘tell’ are more commonly used with human Themes, but still it was often necessary to resort to elicitation, rather than observe spon‑taneous speech in actual use. Finally, the peculiar situation of endanger‑ment which characterises Araki also leaves few opportunities for natural conversation to be recorded. It was therefore impossible to conduct any quantitative study based on frequency, or to observe such parameters as topicality or discourse saliency in a natural corpus. Judgments given by speakers, assessing the grammaticality and natural‑ness of each construction, had to be given full weight.

TWO LOCAL PERSONS

When the two arguments are local persons, i.e. speech-act participants, free variation is observed. Both the secundative and the indirective alignments are accepted:

(51)

R̄ap̈ala‑ku

mo=

je

varai

koT

isa‑kuG.

 

friend-1s

3:R=

NEG

tell

-2s:OBJ

DAT-1s

 

‘My friend never mentioned you to me.’

=

R̄ap̈ala‑ku

mo=

je

varai

‑áG

ini‑koT.

 

friend-1s

3:R=

NEG

tell

-1s:OBJ

OBL-2s

 

‘My friend never told me about you.’

This suggests that Speaker and Addressee do not enter in any absolute hierarchy with each other.

Another sign that there is no fixed hierarchy between the two speech act participants is that the choice of construction can be sensitive to “syntactic priming” effects (cf. Branigan et al. 1995). Thus in (52), the fact that the reply shows secundative alignment is presumably due to the use of that same construction in the question:

(52)

M̈ar̄a

sa

r̄ap̈ala‑m

mo=

je

varai

‑áG

ini‑koT?

 

because

what

friend-1s

3:R=

NEG

tell

-1s:OBJ

OBL-2s

 

‘Why hasn't your friend ever told me about you?’

M̈ar̄a

jore

jo=

varai

‑koG

ini‑áT,

o=

pa=

lokoru.

 

because

if

3s:Irr

tell

-2s:OBJ

OBL‑1s

2s:Irr

FUT

be.angry

 
 

‘Because if he had told you about me, you would have been angry.’

If there existed a hierarchy whereby, say, the Speaker ranked higher than the Addressee, then the answer in (52) would have shown a change in alignment (→  jo=varai‑áTsa‑mG) so as to keep the hierarchy Sp> Ad – in a way similar to the pair (47)‑(47’) above. Instead, the fact that the order of participants is sensitive to syntactic priming proves that no such hierarchy holds between the two speech participants.

TWO NON-LOCAL PERSONS

When both T and G are [+human] [‑local] (i.e. 3rd person), they are not strictly ordered according to the scale defined in 〈H2〉. Again, this absence of ordering results in free variation; both alignments are equally accepted:

(53)

Om=

r̄e

vsei

doktaG

n

nar̄u-mT?

 

2s:R=

PFT

show

doctor

OBL

son-2s

 

‘Have you shown the doctor your son?’

=

Om=

r̄e

vsei

nar̄u‑mT

sa‑n

doktaG?

 

2s:R=

PFT

show

son-2s

DAT-CSTR

doctor

 

‘Have you shown your son to the doctor?’

Judgments of grammaticality or acceptability are not affected by the syntactic status of the arguments, as NP vs pronoun. Thus the following utterances are judged equally grammatical:

(54)

Nam=

je

m̈is

vsei

doktaG

ni‑aT.

 

1s:R=

NEG

yet

show

doctor

OBL-3s

 

‘I haven't shown him to the doctor.’

=

Nam=

je

m̈is

vsei

aT

sa‑n

doktaG.

 

1s:R=

NEG

yet

show

‑3s:OBJ

DAT-CSTR

doctor

 

‘I haven't shown him to the doctor.’

(55)

Nam=

je

m̈is

vsei

‑aG

ni‑aT.

 

1s:R=

NEG

yet

show

-3s:OBJ

OBL-3s

 

‘I haven't shown himi to himj .’

=

Nam=

je

m̈is

vsei

aT

sa‑naG.

 

1s:R=

NEG

yet

show

‑3s:OBJ

DAT-3s

 

‘I haven't shown himi to himj .’

The equal grammaticality of both constructions, in the case of two human 3rd person participants, contrasts with the sharp asymmetry observed when the Theme is [‑human]:

(56)

M̈ar̄a

sa

om=

je

vsei

r̄am̈a‑mG

in

r̄ap̈ala‑mT?

 

because

what

2s:R=

NEG

show

father-2s

OBL

friend-2s

 

‘Why don't you show your father your friend?’

=

M̈ar̄a

sa

om=

je

vsei

r̄ap̈ala‑mT

sa‑n

r̄am̈a‑mG?

 

because

what

2s:R=

NEG

show

friend-2s

DAT-CSTR

father-2s

 

‘Why don't you show your friend to your father?’

(57)

M̈ar̄a

sa

om=

je

vsei

r̄am̈a‑mG

lo

pla‑m

toT?

 

because

what

2s:R=

NEG

show

father-2s

OBL

FARMING-2s

hen

 

‘Why don't you show your father your chickens?’

 

*M̈ar̄a

sa

om=

je

vsei‑a

pla‑m

toT

sa‑n

r̄am̈a‑mG?

 

because

what

2s:R=

NEG

show-3s

FARMING-2s

hen

DAT-CSTR

father-2s

 

*‘Why don't you show your chickens to your father?’

Even though both alignments are accepted in elicitation – as in (53)‑(56) – it is possible that the choice of one construction over the other, in natural discourse, may involve such dimensions as discourse topicality, rhythmic weight, or other factors. However, these questions have proved difficult to test, for reasons mentioned above. Under elicitation, both the secundative and indirective construc‑tions were judged equally grammatical, and even equally natural; as for corpus examples, they were too few to make general statements.

This being said, the observation of naturally occurring utterances seems to indicate a slight preference in favor of indirective alignment with human Ts, as in (58):

(58)

R̄asi‑ku

mo=

sle

nar̄u‑naT

sa-n

p̈ir̄a

nohoniG.

 

brother-1s

3:R=

give

son-3s

DAT-CSTR

woman

that

 

‘My brother gave his child to that woman.’ [i.e. he got her pregnant]

This tendency has an interesting corollary. In the case of anaphoric reference using pronouns, it is often possible for the hearer to calculate the animacy of the Theme not by the form of the pronoun itself (since there is a single 3s pronoun ‑a ‘him/her/it’) but based on the choice of the construction – as in (50) above. In a sentence like (59), for example, the use of the indirective construction entails that the Theme is equal or superior to the Goal on the saliency hierarchy, which means it has to be [+human]:

(59)

O=

kan

varai

aT

sa-naG!

 

2s:I=

PROH

tell

-3s:OBJ

DAT-3s

 

‘Don't tell himi about himj /her.’ [*about it]

 

T is core, G is peripheral Theme is necessarily [ +human]

The secundative construction, even though it could in principle refer to the same situation (two human participants), is typically reserved for cases when the Theme is [‑human]:

(59’)

O=

kan

varai

‑aG

ini‑aT!

 

2s:I

PROH

tell

-3s:OBJ

OBL-3s

 

‘Don't tell him about it.’ [?? about him/her]

 

T is peripheral, G is core  Theme is most probably [‑ human]

Araki thus favours indirective alignment as the default construction when dealing with human themes, because it is a semantically unambiguous strategy. This preference is found even when T has low individuation, as in this negative sentence where T is marked as [‑specific]:

(60)

Na=

pa=

je

sle

r̄eT

sa-naG.

 

1s:Irr

FUT

NEG

give

any

DAT-3s

 

‘I won't give her any (child).’

This can be compared with cases when the Theme is [‑specific] and [‑human]:

(60’)

Na=

pa=

je

slei

‑aG

n

r̄eT.

 

1s:Irr

FUT

NEG

give

‑3s:OBJ

OBL

any

 

‘I won't give her any (money).’

NON-HUMAN GOALS?

I mentioned in §4.1 that the recipient of sle ‘give’, varai ‘tell’ and vse ‘show’ is invariably [+human]. One reason for this is that the three actions normally involve sentient participants, which are normally human.

Only few animals are present in the traditional environ‑ment of Araki speakers: mostly birds, sea creatures, hunting game; farm-raised pigs and chickens; wild dogs. None of these belong to the social realm of humans, in the way pets, for example, do in other cultures. The only case when these ditransitive verbs are attested with animal recipients is in children stories whose heroes are animals:

(61)

Lo

ran

mo=hese,

Siho

mo=

varai‑Ø

Hotou

mo=re:

“…”

 

LOC

day

3:R=one

Kingfisher

3:R=

tell‑Ø

Hermitcrab

3:R=say

 
 

‘One day, Kingfisher told Hermitcrab: “…”’

In (61), the Theme is the reported speech that follows the clause, and the Goal is a hermitcrab. Even though the latter is non-human, it is here treated formally like a human object, as is shown by the absence of agreement marker on the verb: compare the zero of (61) with (14)‑(15) above. This belongs to a more general pattern of perso‑nifi‑cation, whereby animal heroes in stories take up the morpho‑syntactic properties (accusative marking, genitive marking, determiners, etc.) which are normally reserved, in ordinary speech, to human referents (François 2002:97, 142). In other words, (61) is not a genuine instance of a [‑human] recipient, because it appears in a context where animals are commonly recategorised as human anyway.

The configuration in which a genuine animal (other than in stories) is a recipient of an event of transfer, as in give the dog a bone, is not attested in my narrative corpus, nor was it included in my elicitation data. For a similar context such as give some food to the pig, Araki spontaneously uses a monotransitive verb v ̈ ahani ‘feed’. For these three verbs, all cases of recipients attested in my corpus involve sentient, human recipients.

The other question is whether a recipient can be inanimate altogether, as in Eng. ’ give money to the bank’. When asked about this, speakers avoided the use of these ditransitive verbs. Instead, they preferred to use other verbs (like ‘send’ or ‘put’), with a locative complement:

(62)

Na=

pa=

hureni‑a

no-k

vatu

(jo=

r̄o)

lo

pang.

 

1s:Irr

FUT

put-3s:OBJ

POSS‑1s

money

(3s:Irr=

stay)

LOC

bank

 

‘I'll place my money in the bank.’

Nonetheless, I was able to elicit just one case where the verb sle ‘give’ was accepted with an inanimate goal. The context given was ‘give a child to the Church (as an institution) for adoption’. The construction chosen by the speakers was one in which the Goal, despite being inanimate, seems to rank higher than the Theme (children), insofar as it is treated as the object of a ditransitive construction (secundative alignment):

(63)

Nanar̄u‑ku

mo=rua,

nam=

r̄e

sle‑Ø

jej

nira.

 

children-1s

3:R=two

1s:R=

PRF

give‑Ø

church

OBL-3pl

 

‘My two children, I've given them to the Church.’

There are two ways to interpret this unexpected result (63). One approach would be to analyse the recipient jej ‘church’ as a genuine [‑human] recipient, and observe it ranks higher than a [+human] theme; this would force us to revise the model adopted until now to account for the syntactic distribution of T and G. The second approach would propose that the recipient jej, despite its literal meaning, here “behaves as” a [+human] recipient. While the latter hypothesis has the advantage of rescuing the model, it may look, at first sight, like a circular argument: one cannot explain away an unexpected result by forcing it into a familiar yet different configuration. What we need is external evidence to establish whether the recipient jej ‘church’ here patterns with human or with non-human participants. Luckily, (63) provides the answer to this question, in the form of the agreement marking on the verb (§3.1.2). If jej had its [‑human] reading here, it would necessarily trigger agreement on the verb – as in (64):

(64)

Mo=

je

lesi-a

jej

paro.

 

3:R=

NEG

see-3s:OBJ

church

new

*

Mo=

je

lesi-Ø

jej

paro.

 

3:R=

NEG

see- Ø

church

new

 

‘They haven't seen the new church.’

In a way similar to the case of animal personification (61), the absence of an agreement marker /‑a/ in (63) sle (vs * slei‑a) provides evidence, independent from the issue of ditransitive verbs, that the church is here treated grammatically as [+human]. This is partly due to the polysemy of the noun ‘church’, which may refer to a building as in (64) but also to a social institution as in (63). But it can also be argued that the transfer verb sle ‘give’, due to its privileged relationship with human recipients, has the effect, as it were, of reclassifying its recipient as human.

This observation, finally, is consistent with the choice of the secundative strategy, whereby ‘church’ ranks equal or higher than ‘children’ on the referential hierarchy. This confirms the earlier observation (§4.2) that the object of these ditransitive verbs is always [+human], even when it is only metaphorically so.

5. Discussion

5.1 Summary of results

To sum up, there are two classes of verbs expressing three-participant events in Araki. The first class, including sohani ‘send’, r̄usan ‘release, give away’, and hashaso ‘praise, recommend’, always shows indirective alignment, with T as the object, and G encoded in a dative prepositional phrase (§4.1.1). The relevant constructions optionally involve the use of a serialised verb of motion. I will refer to this class as the ‘ send-class’ in Figure 1 below.

The second class consists of the three ditransitive verbs: ‘give’, ‘show’ and ‘tell’. The behaviour of these verbs rests on an underlying referential hierarchy, with three levels:

〈H2〉

[+human] [+local] > [+human] [‑local] > [‑human]

Table 5 summarises all the configurations examined in the previous sections, with the last column providing reference to numbered examples. The letter in bold refers to the participant (either G or T) which aligns formally with the Patient; as the table shows, it is always the one that ranks higher on the hierarchy. Rows with no bolded letter mean there is variation as to which participant becomes the object; the last row refers to a special case, in which an apparently non-human recipient was treated formally as if it were human.

[+human]

[+local]

> [+human]

[‑local]

> [‑human]

examples

 

G

T

33‑34, 50, 57, 59’

G

 

T

48‑49

G

T

 

35‑36, 42‑46’, 47’

T

G

 

40‑41, 47

T,G

   

51‑52

 

T,G

 

53‑56, 59‑60

 

T,G

← (G)  

63

Table 5: Mapping corpus examples onto the referential hierarchy

As Table 5 shows, the hierarchy between the three levels is robust. Should the two non-agentive participants belong to separate levels on this scale, the syntax of the clause will systematically reflect the hierarchy, by providing the higher-ranking non-agentive participant (T or G) with the status of core argument (Object), and by expressing the lower-ranking one in a prepositional phrase. This results in a regular alternation between secundative and indirective alignments. When, however, the two participants belong to the same level (either two local persons, or two non-local persons), no clear hierarchy governs their syntactic behaviour. Both syntactic construc‑tions are accepted.

The syntax of Araki three-participant verbs is synthesised in Figure 1, in the form of a decision chart.

Figure 1

Figure 1: The syntax of three-participant verbs in Araki: a decision chart

A similar construction split is described for Jamul Tiipay, a Yuman language of California (Miller 2001:162). While the basic alignment of ditransitive verbs in Jamul Tiipay is secundative, “it can change to indirective if T outranks G on the person scale” (Malchukov et al. 2010). However, Araki differs from Jamul Tiipay in various aspects: by the absence of ranking between 1st and 2nd person; by the possibility of free variation between alignments in certain configurations; and by the existence of a verb class for which indirective alignment is the only one possible.

5.2 Functional interpretation

How can we interpret these results? Why do ‘give’, ‘show’ and ‘tell’ behave the way they do, and why do they behave differently from verbs of the send class?

WHO'S AFFECTED?

The morphosyntax of Araki ditransitive verbs is thus sensitive to two features of its non-agent-like participants: whether they are [±human], and whether they are [±local], i.e. directly involved in the speech act. That participant which ranks higher on these two parameters combined will be the verb's object, i.e. align formally with proto‑typical Patients, whereas the other one will be given a peripheral, non-core function in the form of a prepositional phrase.

Næss (2004; 2007), dealing with two-participant constructions, showed that Differential object marking (DOM) is best analysed in terms of affectedness. Highly indivi‑dua‑ted objects, i.e. definite or human or otherwise more salient participants, can be said to be more affected than less individuated ones (Næss 2004: 1202); in her interpretation, this parameter of affectedness is central to the characterisa‑tion of objects in a typically transitive clause. In the case of DOM, the contrast is between two kinds of objects, one more and one less individuated, with different degrees of affectedness.

I'd like to propose that the complex rules followed by Araki ditransitive verbs also involve degrees of affectedness. Yet instead of involving a contrast between two kinds of objects, the opposition stands here between two different participants, T and G. While the position of object, in this language, is in principle open both to the Theme and to the Goal, in a particular clause they have to compete as to which one will be selected to be the object. The main criterion for that competition is their relative degree of affectedness, i.e. which of those two participants is more like a proto‑typical object.

With transfer events like ‘give’, ‘show’ and ‘tell’, the typical configuration is one where the Theme is inanimate and the Goal is human. In this case, the sentient participant is the more affected and thus the foregrounded participant: this explains why this case will systematically results, in Araki, in the alignment of the Goal with the Patient of mono‑transitive clauses.

When both T and G are human, but one of them is a speech participant while the other is a 3rd person, then the local one is more salient in discourse, and perceived as more affected, regardless of its semantic role. Thus if you show me to your cousin, the more salient participant (me) is the one placed on the foreground, and it will be coded as the object in Araki. If one swaps Theme and Goal (as in show me your cousin), the speech-act participant remains foregrounded, and from the point of view of the speaker the event is still semantically oriented towards himself. Here too, Araki will treat that local participant as more salient, and therefore better suited for the position of object – that is, for the morpho‑syntactic treatment that would align them with proto‑typical Patients.

Finally, when both the Theme and the Goal rank equally on the scale, it is in principle ambi‑guous which one will be more affected or fore‑grounded. If I show my girlfriend to my mother, will my action primarily affect my girlfriend, or my mother? Arguably, both the Theme and the Goal are equally affected in such a case (cf. Siewierska and Van Lier 2011). This is why they can equally claim the status of object in Araki, and show here free variation.

TWO CLASSES OF THREE-PARTICIPANT VERBS

Interestingly, Araki only makes this competition possible for certain verbs of transfer, but not for others. In an event such as send (s.th., s.o.), the only participant that will always be affected is the Theme, whether it is human or not. This is due to the fact that send refers to an event of caused motion, which does not necessarily entail that the target is reached: an utterance such as (28) I sent a letter to you can be true even if the letter never reached its recipient. With a verb like send, release or praise, the event is always construed from the perspective of the Theme; it is the only participant which can have access to the status of object. This explains why, in Araki, such verbs are excluded from the domain of ditransitive verbs for which the competition between T and G is open.

By contrast, the events expressed by the verbs sle ‘give’, varai ‘tell’ and vse ‘show’ all inherently entail the success of the transfer event. These three events encode not caused motion but caused possession (see Rappaport Hovav and Levin 2008) – whether literally in the case of ‘give’, or figuratively in the case of ‘tell’ and ‘show’: the main point is that events of giving, telling or showing, are only valid – at least in Araki – if the theme has entered the sphere, whether real or symbolic, of the recipient. In I gave her a present , the recipient is necessarily affected by the event, regardless whether the caused-possession event itself is successful strictly speaking – i.e. whether she did accept the gift or not. In order to be assigned any truth value, these three verbs inherently involve both a Theme and a Goal.

In sum, for any given three-participant verb in Araki, it is a requirement that potentially both T and G must be equally affectable for them to be able to compete for object status. In this language, this lexical precondition is only met by three verbs (‘give’, ‘tell’ and ‘show’); these are the only verbs concerned by the syntactic competition for object status, as defined by the relative position of participants in the referential hierarchy.

6. Conclusion

The syntax of Araki shows sensitiveness to a number of contrasts in the real world, which it makes available for speakers and hearers to retrieve referents.

One first contrast is drawn between three-participant events. Those caused-motion verbs referring to transfer events that are semantically oriented towards the Theme (e.g. send, release…), treat it as the privileged argument, and encode it consistently as an object. Conversely, caused-possession verbs refer to events of transfer which are intrinsically successful (give, show, tell): because their Theme and Goal are potentially equally affectable, they are entitled to compete for the place of object.

Another functional contrast is drawn among referents with respect to their inherent ability to be affected by an event. In Araki, these referential splits play a role in two different parts of the system. Mono‑transitive verbs contrast their Patients based on their referential properties involving features such as humanness, specificity, topicality (Section 3). Likewise, the domain of ditransitive verbs is governed by a hierarchy in which humanness plays a central role, as well as the contrast of person between local and non-local referents (Section 4).

Evidently, the specifics of Araki verbal morpho‑syntax define a system that is typologically original. And yet, its general architecture remains deeply consistent with general tendencies observed elsewhere – including in the present volume – on the role played by referential properties in the grammatical encoding of arguments.

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Author’s Contact Information:
Dept of Linguistics
School of Culture, History and Language
Australian National University
ACT 0200, Australia
malexandre.francois@anu.edu.au


[1] I wish to thank the speakers of Araki who helped me document their language – in particular, the late †Lele Moli and his sons Uhu, Valaua and Grem. This study would not have been possible without Eva van Lier, who invited me to join the volume she was editing, and gave me the opportunity to carry out new fieldwork on Araki – with the precious support of Anna Siewierska, and of the EuroBabel project Referential hierarchies in morphosyntax. Together with two anonymous reviewers, Eva has greatly helped me improve earlier versions of this paper, and deserves all my gratitude.

[2] The orthography used in this paper follows conventions recently adopted by the community, which partly differ from the spelling used in François (2002). Most symbols stand for their IPA value, except ng [ŋ]; j [ʧ]; r [ɾ];  [r] ; consonants with umlaut represent apicolabials:  [t̼];  [n̼];  [ð̼]. Example sentences are glossed according to the Leipzig rules; more specific abbreviations include: cstr: construct suffix (§3.2.1); indep: independent pronoun; ipfv: imperfective; Irr: Irrealis; farming: possessive classifier for items related to farming; poss:drink: possessive classifier for drinks; proh: prohibitive; R: Realis.

[3] I thank Eva van Lier for pointing out these references to me.

[4] Head-marking in possessive constructions is common in Oceanic (Lichtenberk 1984; Ross 2004:514), and also found in other language families (Kihm 2000).

[5] For an example of the same preposition used as a locative, see (5).

[6] The connection between [+human] locative markers and dative is found elsewhere in the area: cf. Mwotlap hiy (François 2003:19). Of course, datives commonly originate in spatial markers: cf. Eng. to; Spanish a <Lat. ad, etc. (Heine and Kuteva 2002:37).

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