Volume 8 Issue 1 (2010)
DOI:10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.348
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An Implicational Map of Parts of Speech
Kees Hengeveld & Eva van Lier
University of Amsterdam & Lancaster University
In this paper we present a two-dimensional implicational map of
parts of speech. We show that this map constitutes an improvement with respect
to the one-dimensional parts of speech hierarchy originally proposed in
Hengeveld (1992) in terms of typological adequacy. In addition, our map is an
innovation in relation to traditional semantic maps since it is implicational in
nature and since the typological implications it contains are hierarchically
ordered with respect to one another. Finally, our proposal shows that the
analytical primitives underlying map models need not be exclusively semantic in
nature, but may also include other dimensions, in this case pragmatic
ones.
1.
Introduction[1]
The aim of this paper is twofold. First, we argue that the
one-dimensional parts of speech hierarchy originally proposed in Hengeveld
(1992) should be reanalyzed as the superficial manifestation of a
two-dimensional implicational map. We show that this new map is more adequate
than the earlier parts of speech hierarchy since the new map covers a number of
counterexamples to the earlier hierarchy, without loss of accuracy.
Second, we explore the status of our proposal in relation to semantic
map modelling in general terms. The map that we propose here shows that
analytical primitives need not be exclusively semantic in nature but may also
include pragmatic dimensions just as they might contain morphosyntactic or
phonological ones. In addition, our model shows that implicational maps, which
embody a series of implicational universals (Haspelmath 1997; 2003), can consist
of several different types of implications that are hierarchically ordered with
respect to one another.
This paper starts out[2]
with
a brief description in Section 2 of the original parts of speech hierarchy. It
then proceeds to present three types of counterexamples to this version of the
hierarchy in Section 3. Section 4 presents the new two-dimensional map of parts
of speech, and the typological adequacy of the new map is discussed in Section
5. Finally, in Section 6 we conclude with a discussion of the nature of
implicational maps in general terms.
2. The Former Parts of Speech
Hierarchy
Hengeveld, Rijkhoff, and Siewierska (2004), based on
Hengeveld (1992), classifies basic and derived lexemes in terms of their
distribution across four propositional functions (a term introduced by Croft
2000, 2001), which are tabulated in Figure 1.
|
head
|
modifier
|
predicate phrase
|
1
|
4
|
referential phrase
|
2
|
3
|
Figure 1: Lexemes and propositional
functions
Figure 1 shows that the functional positions 1-4 are based
on two parameters, one involving the opposition between predication and
reference, the other between heads and modifiers. Together, these two parameters
define the following four propositional functions: head and modifier of a
predicate phrase, and head and modifier of a referential phrase. The four
propositional functions and their lexical expression can be illustrated by means
of the English sentence in (1).
(1)
|
[The tall]A [girl]N [sings]V [beautifully]MAdv |
English can be said to display separate lexeme classes of
verbs, nouns, adjectives, and (derived) manner adverbs, on the basis of the
distribution of these classes across the four propositional functions identified
in Figure 1: Verbs like ‘sing’ are used as heads of predicate
phrases; nouns like ‘girl’ as heads of referential phrases;
adjectives like ‘tall’ as modifiers in referential phrases; and
(derived) manner adverbs like ‘beautifully’ as modifiers in
predicate phrases. Crucially, none of the content lexemes in (1) could be used
directly in another propositional function, i.e. without morphosyntactic
adaptation. Thus, in this example there is a one-to-one relation between
propositional function and lexeme class. Parts of speech systems of this type
are called
differentiated, and the lexical classes can all be said to be
specialized for a certain propositional function.
There are other parts of speech systems in which there is no one-to-one
relation between the four propositional functions identified and the lexeme
classes available. These systems are of two types. In the first type, a single
class of lexemes is used in more than one propositional function. Such lexeme
classes, and the parts of speech systems in which they appear, are called
flexible
. The second type is called
rigid. Rigid systems resemble
differentiated systems to the extent that both consist only of lexemes classes
that are specialized, i.e. dedicated to the expression of a single function.
However, rigid
systems are characterized by the fact that they do not
have four lexeme classes—one for each of the four propositional functions.
Rather, for one or more functions a lexeme class is lacking. The following
examples illustrate the difference between these flexible and rigid parts of
speech systems. In Turkish (Göksel & Kerslake 2005:49) the same lexical
item may be used indiscriminately as the head of a referential phrase (2), as a
modifier within a referential phrase (3), and as a modifier within a predicate
phrase (4):
(2)
|
güzel-im
|
|
beauty-1POSS
|
|
‘my beauty’
|
(3)
|
güzel
|
bir
|
kopek
|
|
beauty
|
ART
|
dog
|
|
‘a beautiful dog’
|
(4)
|
Güzel
|
konuştu.
|
|
beauty
|
s/he.spoke
|
|
‘S/he spoke well.’
|
The situation in Krongo is rather different. This language
has basic classes of nouns and verbs, but not of adjectives and manner adverbs.
In order to modify a head noun within a referential phrase, a relative clause
has to be formed on the basis of a verbal lexeme, as illustrated in (5) and (6)
(Reh 1985:251):
(5)
|
Álímì
|
bìitì.
|
|
M.PIFV.be.cold
|
water.
|
|
‘The water is cold.’
|
(6)
|
bìitì
|
ŋ-álímì
|
|
water
|
CONN-M.IPFV.be.cold
|
|
‘cold water’ (lit. ‘water that is
cold’)
|
In (6) the inflected verb form
álímì ‘is cold’ is used within a
relative clause introduced by the bound connective
ŋ-. This is the
general relativizing strategy in Krongo, as illustrated by the following
examples (Reh 1985:256):
(7)
|
N-úllà
|
à
ʔàŋ
|
kí-ǹt-àndiŋ
|
[n-úufò-ŋ
|
kò-nìimò
|
kàti].
|
|
1/2-IPFV:love
|
I
|
LOC-SG-clothes
|
CONN:N-IPFV:sew-TR
|
POSS
-mother
|
my
|
|
‘I love the dress that my mother is sewing.’
|
(8)
|
káaw
|
[m-àasàlàa-tɪ́
|
àakù]
|
|
person
|
CONN:F-PFV:look.at-1SG
|
she
|
|
‘the woman that I looked at (her)’
|
This shows that
álímì in (6) is not a lexically derived adjective
but a verb that serves as the main predicate of a relative clause. Since this is
the only attributive strategy available in Krongo, we can say that the
propositional function of modification is expressed by relative clauses in this
language, not by lexical modifiers.
The same strategy is used to modify a verbal head within a predicate
phrase, as illustrated in (9) (Reh 1985:345):
(9)
|
Ŋ-áa
|
árící
|
ádìyà
|
kítáccì-mày
|
[ɲ
-íisò
|
túkkúrú.kúbú].
|
|
CONN.M-COP
|
man
|
INF.come
|
there-REF
|
CONN.M.IPFV-walk
|
with.low.head
|
|
‘The man arrived walking with his head down.’
|
The bound subordinating connector morpheme is added to the
verb form
íisò ‘walk’ in (9). This verb again
fulfils the propositional function of head of a predicate phrase within the
adverbial subordinate clauses, which as a whole fulfils the function of modifier
in a (main) predicate phrase.
In sum, the difference between English (differentiated), Turkish
(flexible), and Krongo (rigid), is that (i) Turkish has a class of flexible
lexical items that may be used in several propositional functions, where English
uses three specialized classes (nouns, adjectives, and manner adverbs), and that
(ii) Krongo lacks classes of lexical items for the modifier functions, where
English does have lexical classes of adjectives and manner adverbs. Krongo must
resort to alternative syntactic strategies to compensate for the absence of a
lexical solution. These differences may be represented as in Figure 2.
language
|
head of
pred. phrase |
head of
ref. phrase
|
modifier of
ref. phrase
|
modifier of
pred. phrase
|
Turkish
|
verb
|
non-verb
|
English
|
verb
|
noun
|
adjective
|
manner adverb
|
Krongo
|
verb
|
noun
|
–
|
–
|
Figure 2: Flexible, differentiated, and rigid
languages
As Figure 2 shows, Turkish and Krongo are similar in that
they have two main classes of lexemes. They are radically different, however, in
the extent to which one of these classes may be used in the construction of
propositions: the Turkish class of non-verbs may be used in three propositional
functions, while the Krongo class of nouns may be used as the head of a
referential phrase only. Note that for a lexeme class to classify as flexible,
the flexibility should not be a property of a subset of items but a general
feature of the entire class.
Hengeveld et al. (2004) argue that the arrangement of the propositional
functions in Figure 2 is not a coincidence. It is claimed to reflect the parts
of speech hierarchy in (10):
(10)
|
Head of
Pred. phrase
|
>
|
Head of
Ref. phrase
|
>
|
Modifier of
Ref. phrase
|
>
|
Modifier of
Pred. phrase
|
The more to the left a propositional function is on this
hierarchy, the more likely it is that a language has a specialized class of
lexemes to express that function and the more to the right, the less
likely. The hierarchy is implicational, so that, for example, if a language has
a specialized class of lexemes to fulfil the function of modifier in referential phrase, i.e. adjectives, then it will also have specialized classes
of lexemes for the functions of head of a referential phrase, i.e. nouns, and
head of a predicate phrase, i.e. verbs. In addition, if a language has a
flexible lexeme class that can be used to express the functions of head of a
referential phrase and modifier in a predicate phrase, then it is predicted that
this class can also be used for the expression of the function lying in between
these two on the hierarchy, namely modifier in a referential phrase. Similarly,
if a language has no lexeme class for the function of modifier in a referential
phrase (i.e. no adjectives), it will also not have a lexeme class for the
function of modifier in a predicate phrase (i.e. manner adverbs). Note that the
hierarchy makes no claims about adverbs other than those of manner.
The hierarchy in (10), combined with the distinction between flexible,
differentiated, and rigid languages, predicts a set of seven possible parts of
speech systems, which is represented in Figure
3.[3]
As this figure shows, it is
predicted that languages can display three different degrees of flexibility
(systems 1-3), three different degrees of rigidity (systems 5-7), or can be
differentiated (type 4). Of the languages discussed earlier Turkish would be a
type 2 language, English a type 4 language, and Krongo a type 6 language. Note
that we use the term “contentive” for lexical elements that may
appear in any of the four functions distinguished. The term
“modifier” is used for lexemes that may be used as modifiers in both
predicative and referential phrases.
PoS
system
|
head of pred. phrase
|
head of ref. phrase
|
modifier of ref. phrase
|
modifier of pred. phrase
|
1
|
Contentive
|
2
|
Verb
|
non-verb
|
3
|
Verb
|
noun
|
Modifier
|
4
|
Verb
|
noun
|
adjective
|
manner adverb
|
5
|
Verb
|
noun
|
adjective
|
|
6
|
Verb
|
noun
|
|
|
7
|
Verb
|
|
|
|
Figure 3: Parts of speech systems
For further details on and argumentation for this approach
to parts of speech systems see Hengeveld et al
. (2004).
3. Counterexamples to the
Former Parts of Speech Hierarchy
In recent research (Hengeveld & Van Lier 2008, Van Lier
2009), we have attested a number of parts of speech systems with
lexeme classes that are excluded by the parts of speech hierarchy in its
original form. These lexeme classes are of three types, which we will discuss
here.
The first unpredicted lexeme class is a flexible class that we call
nominals.[4]
The members of
such a class can be used as the head and the modifier of a referential phrase.
Nominals are attested, for instance, in Hungarian (Moravcsik 2000). This is
illustrated in examples (11) and (12). In addition, these uses can be
distinguished from appositional uses, which are also open to both
object-denoting and property-denoting lexemes, as is illustrated in
(13).
(11)
|
a.
|
A
|
ház-ak-at
|
látom.
|
|
|
The
|
house-PL-ACC
|
I.see
|
|
|
‘I see the houses.’
|
|
b.
|
A
|
nagy-ok-at
|
látom.
|
|
|
The
|
big-PL-ACC
|
I.see
|
|
|
‘I see the big ones.’
|
(12)
|
a.
|
Ezr
|
a
|
bestia
|
nö-t
|
utálom.
|
|
|
this.ACC
|
the
|
beast
|
woman-ACC
|
I.hate
|
|
|
‘I hate this beast of a woman.’
|
|
b. |
A |
kél |
ház-ak-at |
látom. |
|
|
|
the |
blue |
house-PL-ACC |
I.see |
|
|
|
‘I see the blue houses.’ |
(13)
|
a.
|
A
|
Ház-at,
|
a
|
szülöhely-em-et,
|
látom.
|
|
|
the
|
house-ACC
|
the
|
birth.place-SG.1-ACC
|
I.see
|
|
|
‘I see the house, my birthplace.
|
|
b.
|
A
|
Ház-at,
|
a
|
kék-et,
|
látom.
|
|
|
the
|
house-ACC
|
the
|
blue-ACC
|
I.see
|
|
|
‘I see the house, the blue one.’
|
The parts of speech hierarchy in (10) predicts that if a
language uses the same class of lexemes in the head and modifier function within
referential phrases, it will use this class for modification in predicate
phrases as well. However, this turns out not to be the case in Hungarian, where
the latter function is expressed by simple manner adverbs, as shown in (14), or
by means of derived or case-marked nominals, as shown in (15a-b) (Kenesei et al.
1998:221, 222):
(14)
|
|
Ők
|
mindig
|
külön
|
utaz-nak.
|
|
|
|
They
|
always
|
separately
|
travel-INDF.3SG
|
|
|
|
‘They always travel separately.’
|
(15) |
a. |
a |
hanyag-ul |
dolgoz-ó |
ember |
|
|
|
the |
careless-ESS |
work-PTC |
person |
|
|
|
‘the person working carelessly’ |
|
b. |
Attila |
csend-ben |
ki-men-t |
a |
szibá-ból. |
|
|
Attila |
silence-INESS |
out-go-PST.INDF.3SG |
the |
room-ELAT |
|
|
‘Attila left the room quietly.’ |
We thus have an unpredicted parts of speech class of
nominals, occurring in a parts of speech system that is not compatible with
Figure 3 and which should be represented as in Figure 4.
language
|
head of pred. phrase
|
head of ref. phrase
|
modifier of ref. phrase
|
modifier of pred. phrase
|
Hungarian
|
Verb
|
nominal
|
manner adverb
|
Figure 4: Nominals in the PoS system of
Hungarian
The second type of counterexample is a lexeme class that we
will call
predicatives. It is again a flexible class, more specifically
one whose members can be used as both the head and the modifier of a predicate
phrase. Predicatives are attested in Kayardild (Evans
1995:306),[5]
as illustrated in (16)
and (17):
(16)
|
Ngada
|
mirrayala-tha
|
wangalk-I.
|
|
1SG.NOM
|
make-ACT
|
boomerang-LOC
|
|
‘I made a boomerang.’
|
(17)
|
Ngada
|
mirrayala-tha
|
marri-ja
|
kangk-i.
|
|
1SG.NOM
|
do.well-ACT
|
hear-ACT
|
language-LOC
|
|
‘I can understand the language well.’
|
Note that the lexeme which gets an adverbial interpretation
cannot be analyzed as the predicate of what would be an adverbial clause since
it must agree in its inflection with the main predicate. Thus Kayardild need not
resort to a syntactic construction to create adverbial expressions, as in Krongo
(9), but rather flexibly applies a single class of lexemes in two different
propositional functions.
Predicatives fulfill the functions at the two extreme ends of the parts
of speech hierarchy. The hierarchy predicts that these lexemes should also be
able to express the two intermediate functions (head and modifier of a
referential phrase), but this in fact is not the case, as can be seen in Figure
5 below. Note that the two intermediate functions in Kayardild can be expressed
by a class of non-verbs, i.e. lexemes that can be used not only as the head and
modifier within a referential phrase, but also as a modifier in a predicate
phrase. This means that there are in fact two types of lexeme classes that can
fulfill the function of modifier in the predicate phrase. The difference between
these two classes is that non-verbs, unlike predicatives, take nominal
inflection when they are used as manner adverbs (Evans 1995:227-229).
Language
|
head of pred. phrase
|
head of ref. phrase
|
modifier of ref. phrase
|
modifier of pred. phrase
|
Kayardild
|
predicative
|
(non-verbs)
|
Predicative
|
Figure 5: Predicatives in the PoS system of
Kayardild
The third type of counterexample is attested (among other
languages) in Garo (Burlings 1961:27, 33). This language has a rigid parts of
speech system, which is like the system in Krongo in that it lacks a class of
adjectives and must instead use relative clauses to express the function of
modifier in a referential phrase. This is illustrated in (18)-(19):
(18)
|
Da'r-aŋ-gen.
|
|
big-it-FUT
|
|
‘It will get big.’
|
(19)
|
da'r-gipa
|
mande
|
|
big-REL
|
man
|
|
‘the big man’
|
The example in (20) makes clear that -
gipa is indeed
a relativizer rather than a lexical derivational suffix (Burlings
2003:301):
(20)
|
[nok-o
|
pïsa-ko
|
nik-gipa]
|
metra
|
|
house-LOC
|
child-ACC
|
see-REL
|
woman
|
|
‘the woman who saw the child at the house’
|
The parts of speech hierarchy predicts that a language
without a separate class of adjectives will not have a class of manner adverbs
either. However, Garo does have a large class of derived manner adverbs, which
are formed through reduplication of verb stems, as illustrated in (21) and (22).
There are also a few basic ones such as
tengre ‘fast,
quickly’ (Burlings 2004:101, 267).
(21)
|
jrip-jrang
|
|
‘soundlessly, silently’
|
(22)
|
ka’sine-ka’sine
|
|
‘slowly’
|
Thus, it is not so much the distribution of the adverb class
in Garo that is unpredicted, but rather its existence within the rest of the
language’s parts of speech system, which is represented in Figure
6:
language
|
head of pred. phrase
|
head of ref. phrase
|
modifier of ref. phrase
|
modifier of pred. phrase
|
Garo
|
Verb
|
noun
|
–
|
manner adverb
|
Figure 6: Manner adverbs in the parts of speech system of
Garo.
In order to account for these three types of
counterexamples, a reconsideration of the parts of speech hierarchy is
necessary.[6]
4. A New Two-Dimensional Map of
Parts of Speech Systems
As we noted earlier, the parts of speech hierarchy is based
on two parameters, one concerning the opposition between
predication and
reference, the other between
head and
modifier. With
respect to the former parameter, we expect the function of predication to be
privileged in relation to the function of reference since referring expressions
can only be created by predicating properties of an entity. Thus, in a noun
phrase like
a yellow car, the properties “car” and
“yellow” are predicated of the entity being referred to (see Bach
1968, Dik 1980: Chapter 4). Regarding the second parameter, heads are obligatory
and therefore primary in relation to optional modifiers. This is also shown by
the fact that the lexical class of a modifier is dependent on the lexical class
of its head. Thus, for each of the two parameters we predict the following
hierarchical relations:
(23)
|
Predication ⊂ Reference
|
(24)
|
Head ⊂ Modifier
|
In addition, these two hierarchical relations can in turn be
ranked with respect to one another. In view of the fact that there are
(appositional) languages that do not use modification at all, while there are no
languages that do not display the predication-reference distinction (even though
they may not do so at the level of lexical classification, but rather at the
level of syntactic constructions), we expect the predication-reference parameter
to be primary in relation to the head-modifier parameter, as in (25):
(25)
|
((Predication/Reference) ⊂ (Head/Modifier))
|
A further consequence of the combined effects of these
parameters is that specialization of classes of lexical heads in the predicative
domain is expected to precede specialization of classes of lexical heads in the
referential domain.
We may now formulate three implicational constraints, which
are given in general terms in (26)-(28):
(26)
|
Predication ⊂ Reference
|
|
a.
|
If a language has a specialized class of lexemes that can be used as
the head of a referential phrase, it must also have a specialized class of
lexemes that can be used as the head of a predicate phrase, i.e. if a languages
has nouns, then it has verbs.
|
|
b.
|
If a language has a flexible class of lexemes that can be used as the
head of a referential phrase (but not as the head of a predicate phrase since
the restriction then becomes irrelevant), it must also have a flexible or
specialized class of lexemes that can be used as the head of a predicate phrase,
i.e. if a language has nominals or non-verbs, then it has verbs or
predicatives.
|
(27)
|
Head ⊂ Modifier
|
|
a.
|
If a language has a specialized class of lexemes that can be used as
the modifier within a phrase, it must also have a specialized class of lexemes
that can be used as the head of that phrase, i.e. if a language has manner
adverbs, then it has verbs, and if it has adjectives, then it has
nouns.
|
|
b.
|
If a language has a flexible class of lexemes that can be used as the
modifier within a phrase (but not as the head of that phrase since the
restriction then becomes irrelevant), it must also have a flexible or
specialized class of lexemes that can be used as the head of that phrase, i.e.
if a language has modifiers, or non-verbs, then it has verbs (or a class of
flexible heads, but this is excluded by principle (28)); and if a language has
modifiers (or non-nouns,[7]
but this
is excluded by principle (26a)), then it has nouns (or heads, but these are
excluded by principle (28)).
|
(28)
|
((Predication/Reference) ⊂
(Head/Modifier))[8]
|
|
|
If a language has distinct (specialized or flexible) classes of lexemes
for heads and modifiers within any phrase, then it has distinct (specialized or
flexible) classes of lexemes for heads of predicate and referential
phrases.
|
The parameters in (23)-(25) and the constraints in (26)-(28)
are accounted for in the layered implicational map in Figure 7.
Figure 7: The implicational map of parts of speech
Figure 7 shows that the predication-reference parameter
ranks higher than the head-modifier parameter (as indicated by the symbol
∩ in the centre), and that the head-modifier parameter applies in the
domains of both predication and reference, which does not exclude these domains
from sharing a single lexeme class, as in the case of contentives, non-verbs,
and modifiers.
5. Typological Adequacy of the
Model: Coverage and Accuracy
In this section we assess the typological adequacy of the
model proposed in the previous section, i.e. the degree to which it is capable
of capturing all systems attested so far (coverage), and whether it excludes
categories that are not attested (accuracy) (Cysouw 2007).
Starting with coverage, the map in Figure 7 handles all the systems that
were consistent with the former parts of speech hierarchy, as shown in the
simplified representations in Figures 8-14. The system in Figure 8 is consistent
with our model because it involves no lexical distinctions at all. An example of
a language that displays this type of PoS system is Kharia (Peterson
2006).
Figure 8
The system in Figure 9 is consistent because it has both a
flexible lexeme class that can be used as the head of a referential phrase and a
rigid lexeme class for heads in the predicative domain (see (26b)); also because
it has both a flexible class of lexemes that can be used as a modifier within
the predicate phrase and a rigid class of lexemes that can be used as the head
of that phrase (see (27b)); and because it has distinct classes for heads and
modifiers in the predicate phrase as well as distinct classes for heads of
predicative versus referential phrases (see (28)). We have already discussed an
example of this PoS system, namely Turkish.
Figure 9
The system in Figure 10 is consistent because it involves a
predication-reference distinction for heads but not for modifiers. This is in
accordance with constraint (26a): a rigid class of nouns implies a rigid class
of verbs. It is also in accordance with constraint (27b): the presence of
flexible modifiers implies the presence of rigid heads. Finally, it conforms to
constraint (28): distinct classes for heads and modifiers imply distinct classes
for the heads of predicative versus referential phrases. This PoS system is
relevant for Dutch and German, for example.
Figure 10
The system in Figure 11 is consistent with the model because
it involves head-modifier distinctions in both the predicative and the
referential domain. This is in accordance with (26a), (27a), and (28). An
example of this type of system is Georgian (Hewitt 1995).
Figure 11
The system in Figure 12 differs from the one in Figure 11
only in that it lacks a lexeme class for the function of modification in
predicate phrases, while the head function in this domain is expressed by verbs.
This does not violate any of the constraints
above.[9]
A language that has this PoS
system is Pipil (Campbell 1985).
Figure 12
The system in Figure 13 again has a predication-reference
distinction in the head domain but does not have lexical classes for either of
the two modifier functions. This system conforms to (26a) since it has rigid
classes of heads in both the reference and the predication domain, while
constraints (27) and (28) are not applicable. We have shown above that this
system is attested in Krongo.
Figure 13
The system in Figure 14, finally, has only one lexical
class, namely one that fulfills the function of head of a predicate phrase. This
does not violate any of the constraints. This system has not been attested in
its pure form. However, there are certain languages that clearly place a larger
burden on verbs than on nouns, in the sense of resorting to predicative
constructions where many languages would use noun phrases. Tuscarora (Mithun
2000) and Hupa (Golla 1985) are examples of such languages.
Figure 14
In addition to the previous systems, the implicational map
in Figure 7 also covers the counterexamples to the former parts of speech
hierarchy discussed in Section 3. These systems are shown in Figures
15-17.
The system in Figure 15 is in accordance with (26b) since it has a
flexible class for referential heads and a rigid class of predicative heads. It
is also in accordance with (27a) in the predication domain, where it has rigid
modifiers and rigid heads. Finally, it conforms to (28), since it has distinct
classes for heads and modifiers in the predicate phrase, as well as distinct
classes for heads in predicative versus referential phrases. This system is
attested, for instance, in Hungarian, as we have seen.
Figure 15
The system in Figure 16 involves a lexical distinction
between predication and reference but not between heads and modifiers. This
system is in accordance with (26b). Constraints (27) and (28) are not
applicable. As we have shown above, so far this type of system has not been
attested in its exact form; Kayardild does have predicatives but in combination
with non-verbs rather than nominals.
Figure 16
Finally, the system in Figure 17 has rigid lexeme classes
for heads and modifiers in the predication domain, while in the reference domain
it has a rigid lexeme class for heads. Thus, it is in accordance with (26a),
(27a), and (28). This system has been illustrated above with Garo.
Figure 17
It is to be noted that our model predicts seven further
possible systems, namely those presented in Figures 18-24. The system in Figure
18 is in accordance with our constraint (26b), while (27) and (28) are not
applicable. We have attested this system only in combination with a small,
closed class of manner adverbs (cf. Figure 15), for instance in Nhanda (Blevins
2001).
Figure 18
The system in Figure (19) conforms to constraint (26b) since
it has a flexible class of lexemes that can be used predicatively while not
having a class of lexemes that can be used referentially. Constraints (27) and
(28) do not apply. We have not attested this system in any language.
Figure 19
The system in Figure 20 involves a single flexible class of
heads, which can be used in both predicative and referential phrases. It does
not violate any of our constraints. This system has not been attested as such.
However, it does seem to occur as an intermediate type in combination with the
system in Figure 13 above. Languages like Nivkh (Matissen & Drossard 1998)
and West Greenlandic (Fortescue 1984, Sadock 2003) apparently have rigid classes
of nouns and verbs, as well as a class of lexemes that can be used as
both.
Figure 20
The system in Figure 21 also involves a single flexible
class but one that can be used in all functions except modifier in a predicate
phrase. This system does not violate any of the
constraints.[10]
Tagalog has this
type of system. In this language, all content words can be used in all functions
except that of modifier of a predicate phrase. To express the latter function, a
predicative construction is used, as can be seen in example (29) below
(Himmelmann 2007).
Figure 21
(29)
|
biglaan
|
ang
|
kanyá-ng
|
alís.
|
|
sudden
|
SPEC
|
3.SG.DAT-LK
|
departure
|
|
‘He left suddenly.’ (lit. ‘His departure was
sudden.’)
|
The system in Figure 22 is similar to the one in Figure 21,
except that the flexible class can now be used in all functions except modifier
in a referential phrase. So far we have not attested this type of
system.
Figure 22
The system in Figure 23 has a flexible class of lexemes that
can be used as the head of a referential phrase and a modifier in a predicate
phrase, but not as a modifier in a referential phrase. This system has not been
attested either.
Figure 23
Finally, the system in Figure 24 involves two flexible
lexeme classes: one class (Flex1) that can be used as the head of a predicate
phrase and as a modifier in a referential phrase, and another class (Flex2) that
can be used as the head of a referential phrase and as a modifier in a predicate
phrase. We have not attested this system in any language. In fact, this does not
seem surprising, since both flexible classes in this system neutralize
distinctions between opposite values of both the predication-reference and the
head-modifier parameter. Intuitively, it would seem more probable to expect
flexibility in cases where at least one parameter’s value is shared.
However, on the basis of our restrictions, as formulated in (26), (27), (28), we
are not able to exclude the system in Figure 24.
Figure 24
To summarize, our model predicts 17 possible PoS systems of
which 7 were also predicted by the former parts of speech hierarchy. Of these 17
systems, we have attested 9 in their “pure” form (the systems in
Figures 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 17, and 21) and 4 in some kind of intermediate
form, i.e. in combination with other types of systems (the ones in Figures 14,
16, 18, and 20). Four systems (the ones in Figures 19, 22, 23, and 24) are
predicted to be possible, but have not (yet) been attested by us.
Regarding accuracy, the model excludes 34 out of a total of 51 logically
possible systems. Below, we list these systems one by one (Figures 25-58) and
explicate which constraint(s) each of them violates. None of the excluded
systems have been attested by us.
The system in Figure 25 is excluded since it has only one rigid class of
heads, not in the predication domain but in the reference domain. As such it
violates constraint (26a).
Figure 25
The system in Figure 26 has a rigid class of modifiers in
the referential domain without the corresponding rigid class of heads. As such
it violates constraint (27a).
Figure 26
The system in Figure 27 also violates constraint (27a) since
it has a rigid class of modifiers without the corresponding rigid class of
heads, this time in the predication rather than in the reference
domain.
Figure 27
The system in Figure 28 has distinct classes of heads and
modifiers in the predication domain, whereas it does not have distinct classes
for heads of predicative versus referential phrases. Thus, constraint (28) is
violated.
Figure 28
The system in Figure 29 violates constraint (27a) since is
has a rigid class of modifiers in the reference domain without the corresponding
rigid class of heads.
Figure 29
The system in Figure 30 violates two constrains: there is a
single rigid class of heads but not in the predication domain. Thus, constraint
(26a) is violated. In addition, there is a head-modifier distinction in the
referential domain, but there are no distinct classes of lexemes for heads of
predicative versus referential phrases, so that constraint (28) is violated as
well.
Figure 30
The system in Figure 31 also violates two constraints: it
has a single rigid class of heads, but not in the predication domain, so that
(26a) is violated. Furthermore, (27a) is violated in the predication domain
where there is a rigid modifier class without the corresponding rigid head
class.
Figure 31
The system in Figure 32 has two rigid classes of modifiers
without the corresponding rigid classes of heads, so that (27a) is violated in
both the predication and the reference domain.
Figure 32
The system in Figure 33 violates three constraints: (26a)
since there are rigid heads in the referential but not in the predicative
domain: (27a) since in the predication domain there is a rigid modifier class
but no rigid head class; and (28) because there is a head-modifier distinction
in the referential domain but no distinct classes for heads of predicative
versus referential phrases.
Figure 33
The system in Figure 34
violates constraint (27a) since it has a specialized class of lexemes that can
be used as the modifier in a referential phrase but has no lexeme class to
express the head of a referential phrase. In addition, this system violates
constraint (28) since it has distinct classes for heads and modifiers in
predicate phrases but has no distinct classes for heads of referential phrases
as opposed to predicate phrases.
Figure 34
The system in Figure 35 violates constraint (28): there is
lexical distinction between heads and modifiers but no distinct classes for heads
of predicative versus referential phrases.
Figure 35
The system in Figure 36 is excluded since it has two rigid
classes of modifiers without the corresponding rigid classes of heads. As such
it violates constraint (27a) in both the predication and the reference
domain.
Figure 36
The system in Figure 37 is excluded because it violates
constraint (27a): it has a specialized class of lexemes that can be used as the
modifier in a predicate phrase, but it does not have a specialized class for
heads of predicate phrases.
Figure 37
The system in Figure 38 also violates constraint (27a), but
in the referential domain, where it has a specialized class of modifiers but not
a specialized class of heads.
Figure 38
The system in Figure 39 is excluded because it has a class
of lexemes that can be used as the head of a referential phrase but has no class
of lexemes that can be used as the head of a predicate phrase (verbs or
predicatives). Thus, it violates constraint (26b).
Figure 39
The system in Figure 40 violates two constraints: it has a
flexible class of lexemes that can be used as the head of a referential phrase
but no class of lexemes that can be used as the head of a predicate phrase.
Thus, it violates (26b). In addition, it has a rigid class of modifiers in the
predication domain but does not have the corresponding heads, so that it also
violates (27a).
Figure 40
The system in Figure 41 violates constraint (27b): it has a
flexible class of modifiers but no heads, i.e. nouns and verbs.
Figure 41
The system in Figure 42 is excluded because it violates
constraint (28): there is lexical distinction between heads and modifiers in the
predication domain, but there are no distinct classes for heads of predicative
versus referential phrases.
Figure 42
The system in Figure 43 also violates constraint (28). In
addition, it violates constraint (26a): it has a rigid class of heads for
referential but not for predicate phrases.
Figure 43
The system in Figure 44 has a flexible class of lexemes that
can be used as the head of a referential phrase but does not have a class of
lexemes that can be used as the head of a predicate phrase (verbs). Thus, it
violates constraint (26b). Furthermore, it has a flexible class of lexemes that
can be used as a modifier in the predicated phrase without a class of rigid
heads for this phrase. Thus, it also violates constraint (27b).
Figure 44
The system in Figure 45 is excluded on the basis of
constraint (27b): it has a flexible class of lexemes that can be used as the
modifier (but not the head) in a referential phrase, but it does not have the
corresponding class of heads.
Figure 45
The system in Figure 46 is excluded because it has a rigid
head class in the referential but not in the predication domain. As such, it
violates constraint (26a).
Figure 46
The system in Figure 47 involves a rigid modifier class in
the referential domain without the corresponding rigid head class and thus
violates (27a). In addition, it involves distinct classes for heads and modifier
in the referential domain without distinct classes of heads of predicative
versus referential phrases. Thus, it also violates (28).
Figure 47
The system in Figure 48 is excluded for the same reasons as
the system in Figure 47, except that constraint (27a) is now violated in the
predication domain.
Figure 48
The system in Figure 49 violates constraint (26a): it has a
rigid class of heads in the referential but not the predication domain.
Figure 49
For the same reason, the system in Figure 50 is
excluded:
Figure 50
The system in Figure 51 violates constraint (27a): it has a
class of rigid modifiers in the reference domain but not the corresponding rigid
class of heads.
Figure 51
The system in Figure 52 involves a flexible class of lexemes
that can be used as the heads of a referential phrase and as a modifier in a
predicate phrase. It is excluded because it violates constraint (27a) in the
reference domain, where it has a rigid modifier class without a rigid head
class.
Figure 52
The system in Figure 53 is excluded because it violates four
constraints. It violates constraint (26b) because it has a flexible lexeme class
that can be used as the head of a referential phrase but has no lexeme class for
heads of predicate phrases. In addition, this system violates constraint (27a)
in the reference domain since it has a specialized class of lexemes for
modification in the referential phrase but no specialized class for heads of
referential phrases. It also violates constraint (27b) because it has a flexible
class of lexemes that can be used as the modifier (but not the head) of a
predicate but has no lexical class for heads in predicate phrases. Finally, this
system violates constraint (28): it has distinct classes for heads and modifiers
in referential phrases but no distinct class for heads of predicate phrases.
Figure 53
The system in Figure 54 is excluded because it violates
constraint (26b): it has a flexible lexeme class that can be used as the head of
a referential phrase but no lexeme class for heads of predicate phrases. In
addition, this system violates constraint (27b) in the predication domain, where
it has a flexible class of lexemes that can be used for modification but has no
class for heads.
Figure 54
The system in Figure 55 involves a flexible lexeme class
that can be used as the head of a predicate phrase and as a modifier in a
referential phrase. It is excluded because it violates constraint (26a): it has
a rigid class of heads in the referential but not in the predication domain. In
addition, it violates constraint (27a) in the predication domain, where it has a
rigid modifier class but no rigid head class.
Figure 55
It should be stressed
that the system in Figure 55 does not represent the situation found in languages
with predicative adjectives (or “verby” adjectives (Stassen 1997)).
Although in such languages it may be the case that all adjectives can be used as
verbs, the reverse is not true: when verbs are used as referential modifiers,
they take the form of relative clauses. This occurs for instance in Berbice
Dutch Creole (Kouwenberg 1994). This means that there is no bi-directional
flexibility (cf. Evans & Osada 2005).
The system in Figure 56 is excluded because it violates constraint
(26a): it has a rigid class of heads in the referential but not in the
predication domain.
Figure 56
The system in Figure 57 is excluded because it violates
constraint (27a) in the predication domain, where it has a specialized class for
modifiers but a flexible class for heads. In addition, this system violates
constraint (27b) in the reference domain, where it has a flexible class for
modifiers but no class for heads. Finally, this system violates constraint (28):
it has distinct classes for heads and modifiers in the predicate phrase but has
no distinct classes for heads of referential phrases, as opposed to predicate
phrases.
Figure 57
The system in Figure 58 violates constraint (27b) since it
has a flexible lexeme class that can be used as a modifier in a referential
phrase but has no lexeme class that can be used as the head of a referential
phrase.
Figure 58
In summary, this section shows that the new implicational
map of parts of speech has increased typological adequacy compared to the
original parts of speech hierarchy. In particular, this new approach predicts 17
possible systems out of 51 logical possibilities. Out of the 17 predicted
systems, 9 are attested in their pure form and 4 in intermediate type systems.
Another 4 predicted systems have not (yet) been attested. The model excludes 34
systems out of the 51 logically possible ones. We have attested none of the
excluded systems in actual languages.
6. Conclusion: From Semantic to
Implicational Maps
The model proposed in this paper can be related in several
ways to the general methodology of semantic maps. First, our model shows that
analytical primitives of “semantic” maps need not be exclusively
semantic in nature but may also include other domains of grammar, which is why
we use the term “implicational” map in the title of this paper. In
the parts of speech map, the predication-reference parameter and the
head-modifier parameter each pertain to different functional dimensions, neither
of which is connected to the denotational semantics expressed by the linguistic
units involved but rather connected to ways in which lexical items are used to
create predicating and referring expressions.
Second, the proposed new analysis of parts of speech systems uses what
has become known as the “semantic map” methodology to analyse an
important morpho-syntactic property of languages. As Haspelmath (1997, 2001)
points out, implicational maps embody a series of implicational universals. In
this paper we have tried to take this approach one step further by introducing
hierarchical ranking of different types of implicational relations. In other
words, we have attempted to create an implicational map that is an instantiation
of a hierarchy of hierarchies. It is evident that the potential recursivity of
this procedure takes us from two-dimensional implicational maps to
multidimensional implicational networks, which require other forms of
visualization and a more sophisticated analytical methodology.
In taking this approach, a serious problem of the semantic map
methodology is avoided. As Haspelmath (2003) and Cysouw (2007) note, traditional
semantic maps are not specified for frequency of attestation of a specific
language structure since they plot contiguity constraints and diachronic
pathways that are not by themselves implicational in nature. This does not hold
for the map proposed in the present paper: by combining implicational
hierarchies in a single model and ranking them with respect to each other, it
predicts which parts of speech are less marked along two dimensions, and
therefore more frequently attested (e.g. verbs), and which parts of speech are
more marked along two dimensions, and therefore less frequently attested (e.g.
adjectives).
Abbreviations
Abbreviations used in this paper and not standardized in the
Leipzig Glossing Rules: ACT active voice, CONN connector, ELAT
elative case, ESS essive case, LK linker, SPEC
specifier
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Author’s contact information:
Kees Hengeveld
Department of Theoretical Linguistics
University of Amsterdam
Spuistraat 210
1012 VT Amsterdam
The Netherlands
p.c.hengeveld@uva.nl
Eva van Lier
Department of Linguistics and English Language
Lancaster University
LA1 4YT Lancaster
United Kingdom
e.vanlier@lancaster.ac.uk
[1]
We are indebted to
Michael Cysouw and an anonymous reviewer for comments on an earlier version of
this paper.
[2]
In addition to the seven types listed in Figure 3, Hengeveld et al. (2004) distinguish so-called intermediate systems, showing characteristics of two systems that are contiguous in Figure 3. Consider once more Turkish. We have shown above that this language has verbs and non-verbs as lexeme classes in its basic lexeme inventory, i.e. a type 2 feature. However, Turkish also displays a productive derivational process that produces flexible modifiers, which is a type 3 feature. Taking this derived class into account, Turkish must therefore be classified as a language of type 2/3. Mandarin Chinese has open classes of verbs and nouns, a type 6 feature, but also a restricted class of adjectives (see Paul 2005), a type 5 feature. Therefore, it is classified as a language of type 5/6. Including these intermediate types, the parts of speech hierarchy predicts 13 possible types of parts of speech system.
[3]
This counterexample is also mentioned in the Universals Archive (http://typo.uni-konstanz.de/archive/intro/), where it is illustrated with examples from Kambera.
[4]
Evans (1995: 86,
303-304) describes the situation as follows: “Verbals primarily denote
actions and processes, but may also provide adverbial type information about the
manner in which these are carried out (…).” He does mention that
there are “a few lexemes [which] only permit the modifier function”.
However, Evans in fact lists only four such lexical adverbs, and about these
remarks that “it is possible that a bigger corpus would see even these
used as main verbs”. We conclude from this that flexibility between the
two functions is systematic in Kayardild.
[5]
Note that the three
counterexamples discussed in this section do not make reference to the
intermediate parts of speech systems discussed in Footnote 2. However, our
research (Hengeveld & Van Lier 2008; Van Lier 2009) shows that the
attested cross-linguistic variation in this type of parts of speech system is
also more extensive than predicted by the original parts of speech hierarchy.
Specifically, the “extra” classes of intermediate parts of speech
systems need not be contiguous, in terms of the hierarchy, to the rightmost
large basic class of the particular system. They are also not always derived or
small, closed classes. For example, a language may combine a class of
contentives with a large, open class of rigid verbs, as is for instance the case
in Santali (Neukom 2001). The parts of speech hierarchy would predict that
contentives can only be combined with a derived class of non-verbs. In this
paper, we will not go further into these cases. For more data and a full
discussion we refer to Hengeveld & Van Lier 2008 and Van Lier 2009, where we show that extra classes are added to parts of speech
systems in accordance with the implicational restrictions to be outlined in the
next section.
[6]
By
“non-nouns” we would mean a class of lexemes that can be used in all
functions expect the head of a referential phrase.
[7]
What we explicitly do
not want to suggest is that the Head-Modifier distinction must apply within the
predicative domain before it can apply in the referential domain. Thus the
combination of (23/26) and (24/27) should not be read as (PredHead ⊂
PredModifier) ⊂ (RefHead ⊂ RefModifier). Thanks to Michael Cysouw
for pointing this out to us.
[8]
Note that this would
have been a violation of the nested implication (PredHead ⊂ PredModifier)
⊂ (RefHead
⊂ RefModifier), cf. note
7.
[9]
Note that the lack
of a lexeme class for the function of modifier in the predication domain does
not mean that there is a head-modifier distinction in this domain.
|