Volume 8 Issue 1 (2010)
DOI:10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.370
Note: Linguistic Discovery uses Unicode characters
to represent phonetic symbols. Please see Optimizing Display
for requirements to accurately reproduce this page.
The Added Value of the Connectivity Hypothesis for the Map of Parts
of Speech
Comment on ‘An Implicational Map of Parts of Speech’
by Kees Hengeveld and Eva van Lier (2010)
Caterina Mauri
University of Pavia
Hengeveld and van Lier (2010) propose an interesting and
convincing two-dimensional map for parts of speech (PoS), which is highly
predictive and fruitfully integrates implicational hierarchies into a unified
overall account that is in turn implicational in nature and provides a
geometrical visualization of the respective hierarchical organization of the
functions at play.
The authors label their model
implicational map rather than
semantic map because it deals with analytical primitives which are not
semantic in nature, but rather belong to a different domain of grammar. However,
their model “can be related in several ways to the general methodology of
semantic maps” (Hengeveld and van Lier 2010: section 6), and they
highlight three respects in which the implicational map of PoS can push the
theory of semantic maps a step further: it shows (i) that the analytical
primitives can consist of propositional functions, (ii) that semantic maps may
have a high predictive power if they include a “hierarchy of
hierarchies” like the one at issue, (iii) that, if semantic maps are
implicational in nature, they can make predictions about the frequency with
which specified constructions for the mapped functions are in fact attested
across languages.
However, Hengeveld and van Lier do not consider a crucial ingredient of
semantic map methodology, namely what Croft (2003:134) labels the Semantic Map
Connectivity Hypothesis. As Croft and Poole (2008:4) argue, all possible
semantic maps are constrained by the principle laid out in the Connectivity
Hypothesis, according to which “any relevant language-specific and/or
construction-specific category should map onto a
connected region in
conceptual space” (Croft 2003:134), or, in Haspelmath’s
(2003: sec. 2) terms, “the functions must be arranged in such a
way that all multifunctional grams can occupy a contiguous area on the
map”.
The purpose of this brief comment is to point out that the
two-dimensional implicational map proposed by Hengeveld and van Lier could be
even more predictive if the Connectivity Hypothesis was taken into account,
because this additional constraint would increase the accuracy of the model
(i.e. fine-tunes whether it excludes categories which are not attested). This
will in turn highlight the added value of construing the four propositional
functions at issue as interconnected grams on a map, i.e. including in the
analysis the implicational constraints pertaining to semantic
maps[1]
(such as the Connectivity
Hypothesis), besides organizing the different implicational universals into a
hierarchical net.
The authors formulate three implicational constraints that underlie the
unified implicational map of PoS described in their paper (Hengeveld and van
Lier 2010: sec. 4): (i) Predication ⊂ Reference, (ii) Head
⊂ Modifier, (iii) ((Predication/Reference) ⊂ (Head/Modifier)). In
their section 5, Hengeveld and van Lier argue that these three implicational
universals predict 17 systems as possible, although only 13 are attested. Of the
4 predicted but unattested systems, two show multifunctional grams (Flex) that
cover non-contiguous functions on the map. For convenience, the two systems are
reproduced in Fig. 1 and Fig. 2 below (corresponding to Figures 23 and
24 in Hengeveld and van Lier 2010):
|
head
|
modifier
|
|
|
head
|
modifier
|
predication
|
Verb
|
Flex
|
predication
|
Flex1
|
Flex2
|
reference
|
Flex
|
–
|
reference
|
Flex2
|
Flex1
|
Figure 1
|
Figure 2
|
It is argued that these two PoS systems are possible because
in both cases the three constraints (i)-(iii) governing the implicational map
are not violated: (i) there is a flexible class of lexemes that can be used as
the head of a referential phrase
and a specialized or flexible class that
can be used as the head of a predicative phrase, (ii) there is a flexible class
of lexemes that can be used as modifier within a phrase
and a flexible or
specialized class of lexemes that can be used as the head of that phrase, (iii)
in both cases there are distinct classes of lexemes for heads and modifiers
within at least one phrase and distinct classes of lexemes for predicate and
referential phrases. Yet, the two PoS systems in Fig.1 and Fig.2
do
violate the Connectivity Hypothesis, in that the flexible classes included in
the two systems occupy propositional functions which are not adjacent on the
map.
The two authors acknowledge that “it would seem more probable to
expect flexibility in cases where at least one parameter value
[predication-reference or head-modifier, CM] is shared”, but they appear
to regard this remark as a simple intuition, not as a constraint underlying
their map. Their conclusion is therefore that “on the basis of [their]
restrictions [see (i), (ii) and (iii) above], [they] are not able to exclude the
systems in [Fig. 1] and [Fig. 2]” (Hengeveld and van Lier
2010: sec. 5, adapted). However, if flexible classes are to be treated
as multifunctional grams by virtue of their ability to occur in more than one
propositional function, they should be used in propositional functions which are
contiguous on the map.
More specifically, the Connectivity Hypothesis possesses an inherent
predictive potential, because it implies that if a multifunctional gram may
express two functions which are distant on the map, this gram must also be able
to express the functions in between. Therefore, a flexible class used both as
modifier of a predicative phrase and as head of a referential phrase (cf.
Fig. 1) should also be able to occur as modifier of a referential phrase
(non-verb, cf. Fig. 9 in Hengeveld and van Lier 2010), or as head of a
predicate phrase (cf. Fig. 22 in Hengeveld and van Lier 2010: it is one of
the four possible but unattested systems). Likewise, a flexible class used both
as the head of a predicative phrase and as the modifier of a referential phrase
(cf. Fig. 2) should also be able to occur as modifier of a predicate phrase
(but such a system would contradict the constraint in (i)), or as head of a
referential phrase (such a system could only be possible if no class was
available for the modifier function in a predicate phrase, cf. Fig. 21 in
Hengeveld and van Lier 2010).
The Connectivity Hypothesis constraint is based on the similarity
assumption underlying all semantic map models: the contiguity of different
functions on a map is a consequence of their similarity, i.e. of their sharing
some pertinent features. Multifunctional grams map onto contiguous functions by
virtue of the fact that these functions share pertinent features, often as a
consequence of diachronic processes in which a gram gradually acquires new
similar (adjacent) functions. In the case in point, as the two authors remark,
the pertinent features are the values of the two parameters of
predication-reference and head-modifier, according to which the four basic parts
of speech have been organized on a two-dimensional map. The systems in
Fig. 1 and Fig. 2 are thus not attested because the flexible classes
of lexemes they include would have to occur in propositional functions which do
not share any pertinent feature (head of a referential phrase and modifier of a
predicate phrase; head of a predicate phrase and modifier of a referential
phrase).
To conclude, I think that the three initial constraints in (i), (ii) and
(iii) could be integrated with a fourth constraint (iv) stating that a flexible
class may only occur in propositional functions which are contiguous on the map,
in accordance with the Connectivity Hypothesis. The intersection of these four
constraints would lead to the exclusion of systems such as the ones represented
in Fig. 1 and Fig. 2, thus increasing the predictive potential and the
accuracy of the model.
References
Croft, William. 2003. Typology and universals, 2nd edition.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Croft, William and Keith Poole. 2008. Inferring universals from
grammatical variation: Multidimensional scaling for typological analysis.
Theoretical Linguistics 34/1.1-37. doi:10.1515/thli.2008.001
Haspelmath, Martin. 2003. The geometry of grammatical meaning:
Semantic maps and cross-linguistic comparison. The new psychology of language,
ed. by M. Tomasello, vol. 2, 211-243. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Hengeveld, Kees and Eva van Lier. 2010. An implicational map of
parts of speech. Linguistic Discovery, this issue. doi:10.1349/ps1.1537-0852.a.348
Author’s contact information:
Caterina Mauri
Dipartimento di Linguistica Teorica e Applicata
Università degli Studi di Pavia
Strada Nuova 65
27100 Pavia, Italy
caterina.mauri@unipv.it
[1]Following Haspelmath
(2003), the term ‘semantic map’ is used in a broad sense here, so as
to include maps dealing with analytical primitives which are not semantic in
nature.
|