Volume 9 Issue 2 (2011)
DOI:10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.391
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Finiteness in Hinuq
Diana Forker
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary
Anthropology
Hinuq (Nakh-Daghestanian language family, Caucasus, Russia) has a
rich system of verbal forms. In independent/main clauses there are seven
synthetic TAM forms, 20 periphrastic TAM forms, and two heterogeneous TAM forms
that cannot be attributed clearly to one of these two groups. In dependent
clauses there are about twenty forms that serve adverbial function, attributive
function (i.e. headed and headless relative clauses) or complement function. To
these forms belong suffixed forms that are traditionally called participles,
adverbial participles, Infinitive and Masdar.
In this paper I analyze Hinuq verb forms and clause types with
respect to categories and phenomena that have been associated with finiteness. I
will explore which of the criteria actually apply to Hinuq and whether they form
a cluster that could be subsumed under the notion of finiteness.
1. Introduction
1.1 Finiteness in grammatical
theory
[1]
The term ‘finite’, which can be traced back to
the grammatical tradition of antiquity, is based on the Latin word
finitus ‘limited’, a participle of the verb
finio
‘finish, limit’. This means, ‘finite verb forms’ are
limited by a set of features, e.g. person or tense, whereas ‘nonfinite
verb forms’ are not limited by these features.
In the linguistic literature at least three different views on
finiteness can be distinguished: (i) finiteness as a morphological (i.e. mostly
inflectional) property of the verb, (ii) finiteness as a distributional property
of the verb, and (iii) finiteness as a property of the clause in
discourse.
[2]
The first view can be found in some descriptive grammars, e.g. in the
German grammar by Eisenberg et al. (1998: 113). Verbal categories that have been
taken into account for distinguishing nonfinite from finite verbs are tense and
agreement marking. However, this view runs into problems because it is
impossible to determine universally the morphological categories that express
finiteness. Moreover, a number of languages do not express them at all on the
verb, e.g. isolating languages such as Chinese, Vietnamese or Thai.
The second view relates finiteness and independence of utterances. It
states that only finite verbs can occur in independent utterances. In contrast,
verbs in dependent clauses are nonfinite. Nikolaeva (2007a: 3) argues that this
account of finiteness may also be problematic because in a number of languages
arguably nonfinite verb forms can function as the only predicate of an
independent utterance. Evans (2007: 367) uses the term
“insubordination” for “the conventionalized main clause use of
what, on prima facie grounds, appear to be formally subordinate clauses”.
He mentions many examples from Australian and Indo-European languages. For
example in Italian and German the infinitive can be used to express commands.
Similarly, Kalinina (2001) lists several languages where participles or converbs
can occur in main clauses. For instance, in Yukaghir verbal forms with the so
called
action nominal (
imja dejstvija) suffix can be used as
direct objects, as attributes of nouns and as the only predicate of independent
clauses (Kalinina 2001: 47-48). Likewise, the aorist converb in Lezgian
functions also as marker of the aorist tense in independent affirmative clauses
(see also Haspelmath 1993: 131).
The third view seems to be the most widespread account of finiteness. It
has been explicitly advocated by Givón who states that “finiteness
is the systematic grammatical means used to express the degree of integration of
a clause into its immediate clausal environment” (Givón 1990: 853).
That means that the less finite a clause is the more it needs syntactic and
semantic/ thematic integration into its context. Givón takes the
prototype transitive main clause as reference point for finiteness. The
more a clause deviates in its morphology, syntax and semantics/pragmatics from a
transitive main clause the more it is nonfinite.
Givón (1990: 853ff) claims that finiteness is a complex,
multi-featured scalar phenomenon, and lists several feature scales. He describes
three scales of finiteness. The following figure presents the finiteness-scale
of tense-aspect-modality and the scale of major verb-form categories, which are
in principle independent of each other:
most finite
|
tense
|
indicative
|
|
modality
|
subjunctive/modal
|
|
aspect
|
participial
|
|
negation
|
infinitive
|
least finite
|
|
nominal
|
Figure 1: Scale of finiteness
In contrast to Givón, Bisang (2001, 2007) advocates
that finiteness is a discrete, binary phenomenon. His concept of finiteness
relies on the notions of obligatoriness and asymmetry. Finiteness is expressed
by morphosyntactic categories from which the independent status of a clause can
be derived. Only languages with obligatory categories can show an asymmetry
between finite and nonfinite clauses. In other words, finiteness is not a
universal category. Subordinate clauses can contain more (plus-asymmetry)
or fewer (minus-asymmetry) categories than the main clause. Examples of
plus-asymmetry are subordination markers and different-subject markers in
switch-reference constructions. Examples of minus-asymmetry are lacking tense,
person, declarative markers in subordinate clauses. Converb markers lacking
absolute temporal reference, but expressing relative temporal reference are also
treated by Bisang as exemplifying minus-asymmetry.
Another scholar that adheres to the third view on finiteness is Maas
(2004: 361). He defines finiteness as the condition for an independent
interpretation of a sentence (reference of actants, temporal anchorage, etc.).
There is no definition and no understanding of the term finiteness that
all or maybe a majority of scholars would agree upon. Thus, Cristofaro (2007:
92) concludes that “it is even doubtful that finiteness and nonfiniteness
may be cross-linguistically and cross-constructionally appropriate descriptive
categories”. Therefore, I will try to avoid the term
finiteness and
all related terms in my analysis of Hinuq in the body of this paper (Sections
1-3) and discuss its applicability for Hinuq only in a separate Section 4, and
in the conclusion in Section 5.
Instead, I will discuss the various morphological, syntactic, semantic
and pragmatic categories and phenomena that have been related to finiteness.
Morphological (inflectional) categories that have been taken into account for
the definition of finiteness in the linguistic literature include:
- agreement (presence vs. absence of person, number, gender
marking)
- tense (presence vs. absence of absolute
tense marking, relative tense
marking)
- mood/modality (realis vs.
irrealis)
- illocutionary force (declarative vs.
non-declarative)
- aspect (presence vs. absence of
aspect marking)
- politeness (presence vs. absence
of politeness
marking)
Other syntactic and semantic/pragmatic criteria employed
include:
- nonfiniteness: presence of converbal, participial,
infinitival, nominalizing
morphology
- nonfiniteness: presence of nominal
morphology, e.g. case marking or adpositions on
verbs
- nonfiniteness: coding of arguments as
possessors
- nonfiniteness: high referential and
sequential continuity (nonfinite clauses predominantly code situations that
thematically depend on the situation described in the main clause, they usually
do not introduce new referents but have the same referents as the main
clause)
- nonfiniteness: omissibility of overt
subjects
- finiteness: syntactic opacity (anaphors
in dependent finite clauses cannot be bound by antecedents in the main clause,
but anaphors in dependent nonfinite clauses can be bound by main clause
antecedents)
- finiteness: independent clausehood
(i.e. the clause can be interpreted out of
context)
- finiteness: use of topic
markers
Most, but not all of these criteria are applicable to Hinuq.
Section 4 will discuss in more detail all and only those categories and
phenomena that are relevant for this language. In addition, I will consider
evidentiality, which plays a crucial role in distinguishing dependent from
independent clauses in Hinuq, but has not been taken into account so far in the
literature.
Further questions that are addressed in this paper are among others:
Which verbal forms occur in independent and in dependent clauses? What defines
an independent clause in Hinuq? What distinguishes dependent from independent
clauses?
1.2 A short typological
introduction to Hinuq
Hinuq is the smallest of the five Tsezic languages spoken in
western Daghestan (Russia) in the Caucasus, by about 600 speakers. It belongs to
the Avar-Ando-Tsezic sub-branch of the Nakh-Daghestanian language family.
Hinuq has a gender system with five genders that are used to mark
agreement between nouns in the Absolutive case and the majority of vowel-initial
verbs. There are also a few vowel-initial adjectives and adverbials that show
agreement with their head noun (adjectives) or the Absolutive noun of their
clauses (adverbials). In addition, third person pronouns/demonstrative pronouns
vary in form according to their gender and number. The agreement prefixes are
displayed in Table 1.
gender/number
|
I
|
II
|
III
|
IV
|
V
|
SG
|
Ø
|
y-
|
b-
|
y-
|
r-
|
PL
|
b-
|
b-
|
r-
|
r-
|
r-
|
Table 1: Agreement prefixes
Morphologically Hinuq is overwhelmingly concatenative and
strongly suffixing (the only prefixes are the agreement prefixes). The language
has Ergative case-marking.
Hinuq has postpositions. The most frequent word order is SOV, but other
orders are also possible. Generally, Hinuq prefers to put the head in final
position, e.g. in the noun phrase the modifiers precede the noun. The language
is dependent-marking: in possessive phrases only the possessor is marked by the
Genitive case; in the clause the arguments of the verb get the case marking that
indicates their roles. The verb agrees with the Absolutive argument
independently of the role of this argument (i.e. it can be the single argument
of an intransitive clause, the patient of a transitive clause, the stimulus of
an experiencer clause).
2. Verbal
Morphology
2.1 Introduction
Verbs consist of a root that can be preceded by an agreement
prefix and followed by various suffixes. All Hinuq verbs can be divided into
four inflectional classes, depending on the root-final segment. Verbs having a
stem final vowel cannot take the Infinitive suffix; they use the Purposive
converb instead.
In the simplest case a verb can consist of the root only, e.g.
nox ‘come!’. Hinuq verbs do not show person agreement.
Categories marked on the verb are: tense, aspect, mood, evidentiality, polarity,
gender and number. Hinuq has several simple and periphrastic verb forms that
express absolute past, present and future time reference, and four verb forms
that express absolute-relative past time reference (Pluperfect Witnessed and
Unwitnessed, Compound Future in Witnessed and Unwitnessed Past). Aspect is fused
with the tense system, e.g. the Habitual Unwitnessed Past combines habitual
aspect with past time reference (and the evidentiality value unwitnessed).
Similarly, evidentiality is fused with certain tense forms that have past time
reference. Hinuq distinguishes witnessed (i.e. the speaker has seen the event
with his/her own eyes) from unwitnessed past. Unwitnessed past tense forms can
usually not be used with the 1st person. The most frequent negative
suffix is
-me. The categories of gender and number are fused in agreement
prefixes. Furthermore, Hinuq has numerous verb forms that occur in dependent
clauses (converbs, participles, etc., see Section 2.3).
The morphological make-up of verbs can be fairly complex. A simplified
overview of the slots on the verb is displayed in Table 2 together with three
examples. All slots in brackets are optional.
(agree)
|
root
|
(derivation)
|
(derivation)
|
(inflection)
|
(inflection)
|
(polarity /case)
|
|
kʼilikʼ
|
-do
|
-ɬ
|
|
|
-me
|
b-
|
uti
|
-r
|
|
-a
|
-nu
|
-ƛ
|
Ø-
|
edoː
|
|
|
-yo
|
|
-me
|
Ø-
|
uqi
|
|
-ɬ
|
-iš
|
|
|
Table 2: A simplified morphological make-up of
verbs
(1a)
|
kʼilikʼ-do-ɬ-me
[3]
|
|
wash-ANTIP-POT-NEG
|
|
‘not able to wash’
|
(1b)
|
b-uti-r-a-nu-ƛ
|
|
III-turn-CAUS-INF-MSD-SUB
|
|
‘for making it turn’
|
(1c)
|
Ø-edoː-yo-me
|
|
I-work-COND-NEG
|
|
‘if he does not work’
|
(1d)
|
Ø-uqi-ɬ-iš
|
|
I-hide-POT-WPST
|
|
‘I (masc.) hid.’ or ‘I could hide.’
|
Occasionally the negative suffix is inserted into the TAM or
the participial suffix as an infix. Compare for example the affirmative
Intentional Future
Ø-aq’-an
(‘I-come-INFUT’) with its negative counterpart
Ø-aq’-a<mi>n
(‘I-come-INFUT<NEG>’)
, or the negative Past Participle
Ø-uː-yo<me>ru
(I-do-PST.PTCP<NEG>) with the affirmative Past Participle
Ø-uː-yoru
(I-do-PST.PTCP).
I use the verbal stem as the citation form, that is, the root plus
derivational suffixes, if there are any. If a verb takes agreement prefixes this
is indicated by a hyphen before the root, e.g.
-edoː-
‘work’.
2.2 Forms traditionally
classified as “finite”
In the indicative mood Hinuq has five synthetic TAM forms
(Table 3), 20 periphrastic TAM forms (Table 4), and two TAM forms combining
synthetic and analytic strategies (Table 5). Furthermore, there are two
synthetic verb forms in the non-indicative mood (Table 3). They are all listed
in the following, exemplified with the verb
-iƛ’i
- ‘go’.
In all tables # indicates that the relevant verb form does not exist at all (and
therefore the exemplifying verb lacks it).
Note that two synthetic TAM forms (Simple Present, Simple Witnessed
Past) and the Simple Unwitnessed Past are formed with the help of suffixes that
are traditionally classified as “nonfinite”, namely converbs
(Imperfective converb, Perfective converb) and participles (Resultative
participle). From a descriptive point of view it is possible to postulate the
existence of homophonous suffixes that are however, clearly differentiable by
means of their functions. This may simplify the account of the verbal system for
instance in a descriptive grammar of Hinuq. But since this paper represents a
critical discussion of the notion of finiteness based on data from a language
that has verbal forms with a distribution contradicting current views about the
morphological manifestations of finiteness, such an approach is rejected here.
This decision has also consequences concerning the glosses, e.g. instead of
using one label for the Simple Present and a different label for the
Imperfective converb, I employ one and the same label for one and the same
suffix, independently of its uses. These issues, which represent the core of the
(non)finiteness discussion in Hinuq, are analyzed in detail in Section 4.2.
Some of the verbal suffixes have allomorphs whose usage depends on the
last segment of the stem. For instance, the allomorphs of the Simple Present and
the Imperfective converb are
-ho (after stems that end with
-r or
with a long vowel),
-yo (after stems that end with a short vowel) and
-o (otherwise). The allomorphs of the Simple Witnessed Past and the
Resultative participle are
-iš (after consonants),
-š
(after stem-final /i/) and
-s (otherwise). The Simple Unwitnessed Past
and the Narrative converb have the suffixes
-no (after a consonant) and
-n (after a vowel). In the following I will take
-o, -s and
-n as the basic forms.
Label
|
affirmative
|
negative
|
General Tense
|
-iƛ’í
|
-iƛ’i-me
|
Simple Present
|
-iƛʼi-yo
|
#
|
Simple Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-š
|
-iƛʼi-š-me
|
Definite Future
|
-iƛʼ-as
|
#
|
Intentional Future
|
-iƛʼ-an
|
-iƛʼ-amin
|
Imperative
|
-íƛʼi
|
-iƛʼi-yom
|
Optative
|
-iƛʼi-ƛo
|
-iƛʼi-yom-ƛo
|
Table 3: Synthetic TAM forms
The General tense is used when referring to the future or
when reporting general statements that do not refer to a certain moment in time,
e.g.
(2)
|
kečʼ
|
caxeɬ-mez
|
de
|
Ø-iči-ɬ-me |
|
song
|
write.POT-PURP.NEG
|
1SG
|
I-be-POT-NEG
|
|
‘I (masc.) am not able not to write poems.’
|
The great majority of transitive verbs have the Imperative
suffix
-o, whereas intransitive verbs use their stem as Imperative (for
examples see (17) in Section 3.6 and (26) in Section 4.3.2).
Two of the synthetic TAM forms do not have a negative form (Table 3). If
clauses containing these forms are negated, other periphrastic TAM forms must be
used (the Compound Present if the Simple Present is negated; the Compound Future
or the Intentional Future if the Definite Future is negated). Two of the
synthetic TAM forms can be analyzed as homophonous with verbal forms used in
dependent clauses: the Simple Present is homophonous with the Imperfective
converb, and the Simple Witnessed Past is homophonous with the Resultative
Participle. Another alternative analysis could posit that these are not two
homophonous suffixes, but in fact one suffix with different but related
functions. See Section 4.2 for a detailed discussion of these suffixes.
Label
|
affirmative
|
negative
|
Present time reference
|
Compound Present
|
-iƛʼi-yo goɬ
|
-iƛʼi-yo gom
|
Habitual Present
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼos goɬ
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼos gom
|
Resultative Present
|
-iƛʼi-š goɬ
|
-iƛʼi-š gom
|
Intentional Present
|
-iƛʼ-aru goɬ
|
-iƛʼ-ameru goɬ /
-iƛʼ-aru gom |
Past time reference, witnessed by speaker
|
Compound Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-yo zoq’wes
|
-iƛʼi-yo zoq’wesme
|
Habitual Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼos zoq’wes
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼos zoq’wesme
|
Compound Habitual Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-yo zoq’wes goɬ
|
-iƛʼi-yo zoq’wes gom
|
Resultative Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-š zoq’wes
|
-iƛʼi-š zoq’wesme
|
Pluperfect Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-n zoq’wes
|
-iƛʼi-n zoq’wesme
|
‘Still not’ Witnessed Past
|
#
|
-iƛʼ-anu zoq’wes
|
Intentional Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼ-aru zoq’wes
|
-iƛʼ-ameru zoq’wes /
-iƛʼ-aru
zoq’wesme
|
Compound Future in Witnessed Past
|
-iƛʼ-a zoq’wes
|
-iƛʼ-a zoq’wesme
|
Past time reference, not witnessed by speaker
|
Compound Unwitnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-yo zoq’wen
|
-iƛʼi-yo zoq’wen gom
|
Habitual Unwitnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼos zoq’wen
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼos zoq’wen gom
|
Resultative Unwitnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-š zoq’wen
|
-iƛʼi-š zoq’wen gom
|
Pluperfect Unwitnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-n zoq’wen
|
-iƛʼi-n zoq’wen gom
|
‘Still not’ Unwitnessed Past
|
#
|
-iƛʼ-anu zoq’wen
|
Intentional Unwitnessed Past
|
-iƛʼ-aru zoq’wen
|
-iƛʼ-ameru zoq’wen / -iƛʼ-aru
zoq’wen gom
|
Compound Future in Unwitnessed Past
|
-iƛʼ-a zoq’wen
|
-iƛʼ-a zoq’wen gom
|
Future time reference
|
Compound Future
|
-iƛʼ-a goɬ
|
-iƛʼ-a gom
|
Table 4: Periphrastic TAM forms
Periphrastic TAM forms are built up by combining one of
seven verbal forms that otherwise occurs only in subordinate clauses together
with a form of the copula (
goɬ,
zoq’wes or
zoq’wen). These seven verbal
forms are: Imperfective converb, Narrative converb, Resultative Participle,
Habitual Participle, Infinitive, Masdar and the Intentional form. Periphrastic
verb forms that are built by using the auxiliary
zoq’we-s
‘be-WPST’ (or
zoq’wes
goɬ
in one case) have the evidentiality meaning ‘witnessed
by the speaker’, e.g. the following sentence in the Compound Witnessed
Past is part of the memories of a speaker who talks about his
childhood:
(3)
|
ɡulu-za-ƛʼo
|
qʼay-be
|
r-iqʼ-o
|
zoqʼe-s |
|
horse-PL.OBL-SPR
|
thing-PL
|
NPL-bring-IPFV.CVB
|
be-WPST |
|
‘They brought the things on horses.’
|
In contrast, forms containing
zoq’we-n
‘be-UWPST’ have the evidentiality meaning ‘not witnessed by
the speaker’ and are predominantly used when telling fairy tales or
legends, e.g. the Compound Unwitnessed Past used in a fairy tale:
(4)
|
amma
|
haw
|
ked
|
y-uqʼer-tow
|
y-aqʼ-o
|
zoqʼwe-n
|
gom
|
|
but
|
that
|
girl(II)
|
II-heal-PART
|
II-come-IPFV.CVB
|
be-UWPST
|
be.NEG
|
|
‘(Many doctors and other people came), but they did not heal the
girl.’
|
Note that the TAM forms involving the Masdar can only
contain affirmative copula forms, but they have a negative semantics (Section
4.2.4).
In addition, there are two verbal forms that are heterogeneous because
they can be used with or without a copula: the Simple Unwitnessed Past, which is
always periphrastic when negated, and simple when affirmative, and the
‘Still not’ Present, which can be used with or without a copula (see
4.2.4 for an example).
Label
|
affirmative
|
negative
|
Simple Unwitnessed Past
|
-iƛʼi-n
|
-iƛʼi-n gom
|
‘Still not’ Present
|
#
|
-iƛʼ-anu (goɬ)
|
Table 5: Heterogeneous TAM forms
2.3 Forms traditionally
classified as “nonfinite”
As typical for Nakh-Daghestanian languages, Hinuq has a
great number of verb forms that occur in subordinate clauses. These verb forms
are called converbs, participles, Infinitive and Masdar (see Table 6 below).
Most of them are formed by adding a suffix to the verbal stem, but a few verbal
forms used in subordinate clauses are periphrastic.
The verb forms displayed in Table 6 serve either an adverbial function,
an attributive function (i.e. headed and headless relative clauses) or a
complement function. See 3.6 and 4.2.1 for more details and examples.
Label
|
Affirmative
|
Negative
|
Converbs
|
Posterior Converb
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼor
|
#
|
Terminative Converb
|
-iƛʼ-a-če
|
#
|
First Simultaneous Converb
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼo
|
-iƛʼi-me-ƛʼo
|
Second Simultaneous Converb
|
-iƛʼ-a-ɬi
|
-iƛʼ-a-me-ɬi
|
Progressive Converb
|
-iƛʼi-yo –ičin
|
#
|
Reduplicated Narrative Converb
|
-iƛʼ-an(no) -iƛʼi-n
|
#
|
Simple Anterior Converb
|
-iƛʼi-nos
|
#
|
Immediate Anterior Converb
|
-iƛʼi-yorun
|
#
|
Narrative Converb
|
-iƛʼi-n
|
#
|
Imperfective Converb
|
-iƛʼi-yo
|
#
|
Conditional Converb
|
-iƛʼi-yo
|
-iƛʼi-yo-me
|
Concessive Converb
|
-iƛʼi-on(o)
|
-iƛʼi-yon-me
|
Purposive
|
-iƛʼi-yaz
|
-iƛʼi-me-z
|
Participles
|
Local Participle
|
-iƛʼi-ya
|
-iƛʼi-ya-me
|
Present Participle
|
-iƛʼi-yo goɬa
|
-iƛʼi-yo goyo-me-ru
|
Past Participle
|
-iƛʼi-yoru
|
-iƛʼi-yo-me-ru
|
Habitual Participle
|
-iƛʼi-ƛʼos
|
-iƛʼi-me-ƛʼos
|
Resultative Participle
|
-iƛʼi-š
|
-iƛʼi-š-me
|
Other verb forms
|
Nominalized Infinitive
|
-iƛʼ-a-li
|
#
|
Masdar
|
-iƛʼ-a-nu
|
#
|
Infinitive
|
-iƛʼ-a
|
#
|
Table 6: Converbs, participles and other
“nonfinite” verb forms
3. Syntax of the
Clause
Main clauses in Hinuq can be nominal clauses and verbal
clauses. Besides, there is a minor clause type headed by an adverb. Main verbal
clauses can be headed by all verbal forms listed in Tables 3-6. There are three
types of subordinate clauses: complement clauses, adverbial clauses and relative
clauses. This section will briefly discuss all clause types.
3.1 Copula
clauses
Both the subject and the predicate can be in the Absolutive
case (5a) or the predicative can take various case markers, according to its
function (5b). The predicate can be a proper name, a noun phrase, a pronoun or
an adjective. The copula occurs obligatorily; often but not always in
clause-final position (5a).
(5a)
|
Muħamad
|
Nabi
|
poʔet
|
goɬ |
|
Mohamed
|
Nabi
|
poet
|
be |
|
‘Mohamed Nabi is a poet.’
|
(5b)
|
kabaxu-ni
|
gulu
|
zoqʼwe-s
|
debe |
|
black-PART
|
horse
|
be-WPST
|
2SG.GEN1 |
|
‘The black horse was yours.’
|
In non-indicative copula clauses with present time
reference, especially in short interrogative clauses, the copula can be left
out, e.g.
(6a)
|
obu,
|
ni
|
hago
|
uži?
|
|
father
|
where
|
that
|
boy
|
|
‘Father, where is that boy?’
|
(6b)
|
[nagaħ
|
zo
|
hibaɬu
|
unti-mo-qo-s
|
hezzor
|
Ø-uti-yo-me]
|
|
if
|
REFL
|
this.OBL
|
disease-OBL-AT-ABL1
|
back
|
I-turn-COND-NEG
|
|
|
|
di |
mežu-qo |
amanat |
|
1SG.GEN1 |
2PL.OBL-AT |
order |
|
‘If I (masc.) do not come back from the disease, this is my order
for you:… |
3.2 Non-indicative verbal
clauses
Major non-indicative forms are the Imperative (7), the
Optative and the Irrealis conditional (8). Imperatives and Optatives show the
same agreement properties as non-indicative forms (i.e. gender agreement with
the Absolutive argument). Although they are commonly used without overt
subjects, there are no restrictions on co-occurrence with subjects (7). The
major difference between Imperatives and Optatives on the one hand and
indicative verb forms on the other hand is the form of the negative suffix which
at least diachronically differs from the usual negative suffix -
me.
Besides, Imperatives are only used with 2nd person. The Imperative is
identical to the General Tense with a number of intransitive
verbs.
[4]
The Optative occurs with all
persons and numbers.
(7)
|
hoboži
|
me
|
Ø-uɬi
|
di-žo
|
moqoli-ƛʼo-s
|
|
now
|
2SG
|
I-go.down
|
1SG.OBL-GEN2
|
back-SPR-ABL1
|
|
‘Now you (masc.) come down from my back!’
|
In the protasis of irrealis conditional clauses a TAM form
is combined with the particle
q’ede. In the apodosis either the
lexical verb in the General tense followed by a special form of the copula
(
goɬi
, example (8a)) or one of the
future in the past forms is used (8b).
(8a)
|
huɬ
|
uži-ž
|
mecxer
|
b-aši-š
|
qʼede,
|
hayɬoy
|
|
yesterday
|
boy-DAT
|
money(III)
|
III-get-WPST
|
IRR
|
3SG.MASC.ERG
|
|
|
|
kede-z
|
kʼoħlo
|
b-ux
|
goɬi
|
|
|
|
girl.OBL-DAT
|
ball(III)
|
III-buy
|
be.IRR
|
|
|
|
‘If the boy had gotten the money yesterday, he would have bought
a ball for the girl.’ (EL)
|
(8b)
|
[b-eqʼi-š
|
qʼede]
|
b-iƛʼ-a
|
zoqʼwe-ye
|
bazargam-be
|
ɣeme-ƛʼo?
|
|
III-know-WPST
|
IRR
|
HPL-go-INF
|
be-WPST.Q
|
merchant-PL
|
mill-SPR
|
|
‘If they had known this, would the merchants have gone to the
mill?’
|
Realis conditional clauses are expressed by using the
Conditional converb in the protasis (see Table 6). In the apodosis of these
sentences various TAM forms can occur, e.g. the General tense, the Simple
Present or the Compound Future.
3.3 Indicative verbal
clauses
Simple indicative verbal clauses can be headed by a
synthetic or a periphrastic verb. Major clause types are intransitive (9a),
transitive (9b) and experiencer clauses (9c). In an intransitive clause the
single argument of the verb is in the Absolutive case and the verb agrees with
it in gender and number, if it has an agreement prefix. In the transitive
construction the agent is in the Ergative case, the patient in the Absolutive
case and the verb agrees with the patient (if it has an agreement prefix). In
the experiencer construction the experiencer is in the Dative case and the
stimulus in the Absolutive case. The verb agrees with the stimulus (if it has an
agreement prefix).
(9a)
|
hezzo-xa
|
xexbe
|
b-aqʼe-s
|
hayɬo
|
rekʼu-de
|
|
then-PART
|
children
|
HPL-come-WPST
|
that.OBL
|
man.OBL-ALOC
|
|
‘Then the children came to that man.’
|
(9b)
|
haw
|
miskinaw-ni
|
ked
|
y-iži-n
|
hayɬoy
|
|
that
|
poor-PART
|
girl(II)
|
II-take-UWPST
|
3SG.MASC.ERG
|
|
‘He took this poor girl.’
|
(9c)
|
hače-tow
|
bercinaw
|
žied
|
diž
|
rekʼwe
|
Ø-ike-n
|
zoqʼwe-s-me
|
|
how.much-PART
|
beautiful
|
yet
|
1SG.DAT
|
man
|
I-see-PFV.CVB
|
be-WPST
|
|
‘I did not see such a handsome man.’
|
3.4 A minor sentence
type
There is a special construction with the adverb
behula ‘possible’, a loan from Avar, plus a verb in the
Infinitive as the predicate of the clause. These clauses occur on their own and
express future possibilities, that is, events that might occur in the future.
(10a)
|
giluƛʼos
|
b-ox-a
|
behula
|
haw-ƛen
|
eƛi-n
|
|
suddenly
|
III-leave-INF
|
possible
|
that-QUOT
|
say-UWPST
|
|
‘He said it is possible that it (i.e. the monkey) suddenly
escapes.’
|
(10b)
|
zek
|
eli
|
Derbent-ƛʼo-do
|
b-iƛʼ-a
|
behula
|
|
tomorrow
|
1PL
|
Derbent-SPR-DIR
|
HPL-go-INF
|
possible
|
|
‘It is possible that we go to Derbent tomorrow.’
(EL)
|
3.5 Complement
clauses
Bare indicative forms are generally not used in dependent
clauses. They must be marked by some clitic in order to occur in complement
clauses. This can either be the quotative enclitic, which is predominantly but
not exclusively used with verbs of speech (11a), (24a), (25) or the Abstract
enclitic (11b), (13), (28). The latter enclitic is used in the formation of
abstract nouns from nouns, participles, adverbs and
adjectives.
[5]
The only exceptions are
direct speech and complements of the perception verbs
-ike-
‘see’ and
toq- ‘hear’ (11c). That is, complements
of ‘see’ and ‘hear’ can, but need not contain the
Abstract enclitic. Other verb forms are not allowed in complement clauses of
these two predicates.
(11a)
|
uži
|
Ø-uƛʼ-o
|
[zo
|
bocʼe-z
|
Ø-ik-o-ƛen]
|
|
boy(I)
|
I-be.afraid-PRS
|
REFL.SG
|
wolf-DAT
|
I-see-PRS-QUOT
|
|
‘The boy fears that the wolf sees him.’ (EL)
|
(11b)
|
hayɬoy
|
[ƛerba-be
|
b-aqʼe-s-ɬi]
|
diqo
|
cʼaɬer-iš-me
|
|
3SG.MASC.ERG
|
guest-PL
|
HPL-come-RES.PTCP-ABST
|
1SG.LAT
|
tell-WPST-NEG
|
|
‘He did not tell me that the guest came.’ (EL)
|
(11c)
|
hayɬoz
|
toq-o,
|
iyo-y
|
ac
|
y-aɣi-yo
|
|
3SG.MASC.DAT
|
hear-PRS
|
mother-ERG
|
door(IV)
|
IV-open-PRS
|
|
‘He hears that mother opens the door.’ (EL)
|
Other forms frequently occurring in complement clauses are
the Infinitive (12b) and the Purposive converb (12a, b). Both forms are
interchangeable, but the Purposive converb is somewhat more common. The subject
of the Infinitival/Purposive converb complement clause is generally omitted
under referential identity with the subject of the main clause (12a), but in
principle it is possible to preserve it in both clauses (12b). If the main
clause subject is not identical to the Infinitival/Purposive converb clause
subject, then both subjects occur overtly (12c).
(12a)
|
hoboži
|
haɬoz
|
šuƛʼe-n
|
[hag
|
yašikʼ
|
hezzoqʼimur
|
y-aq-ayaz]
|
|
now
|
3SG.MASC.DAT
|
forget-UWPST
|
this
|
box(IV)
|
back
|
IV-close-PURP
|
|
‘He forgot to close the box.’
|
(12b)
|
hayɬozi
|
koƛʼ-o
|
gom
|
[zoi
|
kwezera-za-ƛʼo-r
|
|
he.DAT
|
be.able-IPFV.CVB
|
be.NEG
|
REFL.SG
|
hand.OBL-OBL.PL-SPR-LAT
|
|
|
|
Ø-ič-a
|
/ Ø-ič-ayaz]
|
|
|
|
|
I-stand-INF
|
/ I-stand-PURP
|
|
|
|
|
‘He cannot stand on the hands.’ (EL)
|
(12c)
|
haɬoz
|
r-eti-yo
|
[de
|
kaɣat
|
cax-a
|
/ cax-ayaz]
|
|
3SG.MASC.DAT
|
NPL-want-PRS
|
1SG.ERG
|
letter
|
write-INF
|
/ write-PURP
|
|
‘He wants me to write a letter.’ (EL)
|
Some complements are formed with the Habitual Participle
plus the Abstract enclitic. This type of complement clause occurs with verbs
referring to knowledge. The following example represents a complement clause
embedded into a converb clause.
(13)
|
[ac
|
y-aɣi-me-ƛʼos-ɬi]
|
r-eqʼi-ƛʼo |
|
door(IV)
|
IV-open-NEG-HAB.PTCP -ABST
|
V-know-SIM |
|
‘when (he) understood, that (she) would not open the
door…’
|
Complements can also be nominalized and take case suffixes.
This type of complement clause is very rare and occurs only with a few verbs,
e.g.
boži -iq- ‘believe’ and
šak -iq-
‘doubt’. Nominalized verb forms occurring in complement clauses
are the Past Participle or the Masdar (14).
(14)
|
de
|
šak
|
Ø-iqqo
|
[zekes
|
ɣwede
|
r-egi
|
r-iq-a-nu-ƛ’o]
|
|
1SG
|
doubtful
|
I-be.PRS
|
tomorrow.GEN1
|
day(V)
|
V-good
|
V-be-INF-MSD-SPR
|
|
‘I doubt that tomorrow will be good weather (lit. a good
day).’ (EL)
|
The verbs
ɬaqʼe-
(intr.) and
ɬaqʼer-
(trans.)
‘finish’, ‘end’ behave exceptionally because their
complements are always and only marked with the Narrative converb
suffix.
(15)
|
[kak
|
r-uː-n]
|
ɬaqʼe-yƛʼo |
|
prayer(V)
|
V-do-PFV.CVB
|
end-SIM |
|
‘when praying ends…’
|
3.6 Adverbial clauses (Converb
clauses)
Hinuq has eight specialized temporal converbs that express
temporal relations (Table 6). Their suffixes are mostly diachronically complex,
containing for example a case suffix (e.g. the Posterior Converb ends with the
Lative -
r) or an enclitic (e.g. the second Simultaneous Converb contains
the Abstract enclitic -
ɬi,
and the
Immediate Anterior Converb the coordinative enclitic -
n).
Hinuq has two contextual converbs that are not only used in adverbial
clauses but also for the formation of periphrastic TAM forms (see Table 4 in
Section 2.2). Furthermore, there are three specialized non-temporal converbs
expressing condition, concession (16) and purpose. Only the converbs expressing
simultaneity and the specialized non-temporal converbs have negative
forms.
(16)
|
[haɬo
|
sumka-ma
|
teɬ
|
xemu
|
gor-ono]
|
hado
|
ƛax-a
|
gom
|
|
this.OBL
|
bag-IN
|
inside
|
stone
|
put-CONC
|
this
|
tear-INF
|
be.NEG
|
|
‘Even if you put a stone into this bag, it will not tear.’
(EL)
|
The Purposive converb and the Narrative converb are also
used in complement clauses (see (12a-c) in Section 3.5).
Not only converbs, but also three participles (the Local Participle, the
Present Participle, and the Past Participle) occur in adverbial clauses. The
Local Participle is used in adverbial clauses expressing local and temporal
circumstances (and in relative clauses with a locative meaning). The Present
Participle has the temporal meaning of simultaneity in adverbial clauses. The
Past Participle serves not only as the base for the Immediate Anterior Converb,
but occurs also in temporal adverbial clauses with the meaning
‘when’, in non-temporal adverbial clauses with the meaning
‘as’ (17), and for the expression of causes. In order to achieve the
non-temporal meanings local case suffixes must be added to the Past
Participle.
(17)
|
[debez
|
r-eqʼi-yoru-ho-r]
|
r-uw-o! |
|
2SG.DAT
|
V-know-PST.PTCP-ILOC-LAT
|
V-do–IMP |
|
‘Do as you like (lit. know, can).’ (EL)
|
3.7 Relative
clauses
The most common way of forming a relative clause is the use
of participles as the predicate of the relative clause. Sentence (18) presents
an example with the Present Participle. A large number of semantic roles can be
relativized (e.g. agent, patient, recipient, experiencer, instrument, location,
etc.). There is usually no indication of the role that the referent of the head
noun has in the relative clause (gap strategy).
(18)
|
b-aqʼ-o
|
hayɬo-de-r
|
hibaw
|
[haɬo-y
|
kiki-yo
|
|
III-come-PRS
|
3SG.MASC.OBL-ALOC-LAT
|
that
|
3SG.MASC.OBL-ERG
|
feed-IPFV.CVB
|
|
|
|
goɬa] |
coy |
|
|
|
|
be.PTCP |
eagle(III) |
|
|
|
|
‘To him comes the eagle that he had fed.’ |
4. Finiteness in
Hinuq
4.1 Verbal forms and clause
types
The distribution of verbal suffixes and clause types is
summarized in Table 7. Optionality is indicated by parentheses. Three suffixes
(
-o, -n, -s) occur in both independent and dependent clauses with
differing, but related meanings/functions. However, as mentioned in Section 2.2,
they are not regarded as different, though homophonous suffixes, but rather as
suffixes occurring in different functions. Therefore, each of the three suffixes
is assigned only one label in the glosses (i.e.
-o is glossed with
IPFV.CVB, -n is glossed with PFV.CVB and
-s is glossed with
RES.PTCP).
clause type
verbal suffixes
|
independent clauses
|
dependent clauses
|
simple verb
|
periphrastic verb
|
complement clauses
|
adverbial clauses
|
relative clauses
|
Imperfective converb
(-o / -yo / -ho)
|
✓
|
✓ + be
|
✓
(+ enclitic)
|
✓
|
✓+
goɬa
[6]
|
Perfective converb
(-n / -no)
|
✓
|
✓ + be
|
✓
|
✓
|
|
Resultative participle
(-s / -š / -iš)
|
✓
|
✓ + be
|
✓ + enclitic
|
|
✓
|
Masdar (-nu)
|
✓
|
✓ + be
|
✓ (+ case)
|
|
✓
|
Habitual participle (-ƛʼos)
|
|
✓ + be
|
✓ + enclitic
|
|
✓
|
Infinitive (-a)
|
|
✓ + be
|
✓
|
✓ +-če
|
✓+ -li
|
Local participle (-ya), Past participle (-oru) (v)
|
|
|
|
✓
(+-n / case)
|
✓
|
Definite Future (-as), Intentional Future (-an), Imperative Ø/-o),
Optative (-ƛʼo) (i)
|
✓
|
|
|
|
|
Intentional (-aru) (vi)
|
|
✓+ be
|
|
|
|
specialized converbs (iv)
|
|
|
|
✓
|
|
Table 7: The distribution of verbal suffixes and clause
types
There is no one-to-one match between verb suffixes/forms and
clause types, i.e. the majority of the verb forms occur in more than one clause
type. There are no verbal forms exclusively specialized for complement clauses
or relative clauses. All verb forms allow for overt subjects. All verb forms
agree with the absolutive argument of their
clause.
[7]
When looking in more detail at the distribution of the verbal suffixes
across clause types the following picture arises
- There are four suffixes that are used only in simple affirmative
TAM forms, two of them in indicative forms (Definite Future, Intentional
Future), one in the Imperative and one in the Optative. These forms lack either
a negative counterpart, or the negative form is morphologically somewhat
arbitrary (i.e. at least synchronically it is not formed with the negative
suffix -me, which is used in all other verbal TAM suffixes). Suffixes of
this group can be regarded as the Hinuq prototype of suffixes expressing
‘finiteness’. The group is exemplified by three sentences with the
Imperative, (7), (17) and (26).
- There are four suffixes that are used in dependent clauses, and
also in independent clauses with or without an additional auxiliary
(Imperfective converb, Perfective converb, Resultative participle and
Masdar, see 4.2)
- There are two suffixes that are used in dependent clauses, and
also in independent clauses always in combination with an auxiliary (Habitual
Participle and Infinitive). Examples are (13) and (28) for the Habitual
Participle and (8b), (10a, b), (12b, c), (16) and (39a) for the
Infinitive.
- There are a number of suffixes used only in adverbial clauses,
e.g. the Posterior Converb, the Simultaneous converbs or the Concessive converb.
These suffixes mostly lack a negative counterpart. Examples can be found in (15)
and (16).
- Two suffixes are exclusively used for the formation of verb forms
occurring in adverbial and relative clauses (Local Participle, Past Participle)
(17).
- There is one suffix (the Intentional Participle -aru) that
is used only in independent clauses together with an auxiliary. It is not used
as the head of dependent clauses.
This picture is familiar from other Nakh-Daghestanian
languages (see Kalinina and Sumbatova 2007 for Icari Dargwa, Bagwalal and
Tsakhur, Kalinina 2001 for Avar and Lezgian and Creissels 2009 for Akhvakh).
4.2 Suffixes of group
(ii)
One of the most remarkable features of the Hinuq verbal
system is the existence of the suffixes of group (ii) that are used both in
dependent and independent clauses, in simple and periphrastic verbal forms. The
first three of these suffixes,
-o, -n and
-s, are among the most
frequently used verb forms. On the contrary, the Masdar is only occasionally
employed.
As has been mentioned before (Section 2.2) these suffixes could be
treated as being different suffixes with different functions that just happen to
have the same form. However, I want to argue that the suffixes represent only
one morpheme each, but occur in more than one function.
4.2.1 The Imperfective converb
(
-o)
The Imperfective converb suffix
-o has the most
functions. It occurs in five different clause types: (i) in independent clauses
as the Simple Present, without any additional auxiliary (11a, c), (12c), (14),
(18), (24a), (26), etc.; (ii) in periphrastic TAM forms of independent clauses,
e.g. (3), (4), (12b), (19), (27a); (iii) in complement clauses together with a
clitic, e.g. with the quotation clitic (11a); (iv) in adverbial clauses as
Imperfective converb (24a); and in relative clauses in combination with
goɬa
, the affirmative participle of
the copula (18), (29b).
The various occurrences of
-o are usually formally distinct due
to an additional auxiliary, e.g. the participle
goɬa
occurs only in dependent clauses
(relative clauses and adverbial clauses), and thus also the combination of
-o and
goɬa
always heads a
dependent clause. But the occurrences of
-o in the Simple Present and as
Imperfective converb in adverbial clauses can only functionally be distinguished
from each other. That means, verbs in the Simple Present have absolute present
time reference, whereas verbs used as Imperfective converbs do not express
absolute present time reference, but relative present time reference and
imperfective aspect (see example (24a) in Section 4.3.1). I regard the
occurrence of
-o as Imperfective converb as basic, from which the
occurrence of the same suffix in independent clauses with present time reference
can be implied. That is, if a converb is used in an independent clause it must
have some type of absolute time reference. For a converb with an imperfective
aspectual meaning it is natural to arrive at a present time reference in
independent clauses since the present is usually imperfective. Thus, the
occurrence of
-o as Simple Present is a consequence of its use in
independent clauses rather than an independent development of the converb in
this position.
[8]
4.2.2 The Perfective converb
-n
The Perfective converb suffix
-n occurs in four
different clause types: (i) as Simple Unwitnessed Past in independent
affirmative main clauses (9b), (10a), (12a); (ii) in periphrastic verb forms
heading independent clauses, e.g. in the Pluperfect Witnessed Past (9c); in
complement clauses (15), (24b); and in adverbial clauses (19), (27b):
(19)
|
hayɬo
|
rekʼu-y
|
[ƛemo-ƛʼo-no
|
Ø-ix-no]
|
|
that.OBL
|
man(I).OBL-ERG
|
stairway-SPR-and
|
I-get.up-PFV.CVB
|
|
b-utʼ-o
|
zoqʼe-s
|
geni
|
ažey-ƛʼo-s
|
|
III-collect-IPFV.CVB
|
be-WPST
|
pear(III)
|
tree-SPR-ABL1
|
|
‘That man, having climbed up on the stairway, was collecting
pears from a tree.’
|
Although there are no formal means of separating the various
uses of
-n from each other (e.g. auxiliaries in periphrastic verb forms
or enclitics in some complement clauses), there is at least a significant
difference in meaning that separates the occurrences of
-n in the Simple
Unwitnessed Past from all other occurrences of this suffix. This difference is
due to evidentiality. When used as Simple Unwitnessed Past
-n combines
past time reference with the evidentiality meaning unwitnessed. In contrast,
when
-n is used in certain complement clauses without any enclitic it
lacks both a temporal and an evidential value (15), (see (24b) in Section 4.3.1
for an example and its explanation). Similarly, in adverbial clauses it lacks
evidentiality and expresses relative temporal meaning (simultaneity or
anteriority). When
-n is used on the lexical verb for the formation of
periphrastic verb forms (Table 4) it also lacks evidentiality, because
evidentiality is expressed by the auxiliary and not by the lexical verb. For
example, the lexical verb in the Pluperfect Witnessed Past has the suffix
-n, but the whole clause has the evidentiality meaning of witnessed (9c).
Note that in Archi, another Nakh-Daghestanian language, the situation is
almost identical, i.e. the same suffix occurs alone in an unwitnessed past
function and as a converb, and in periphrastic verb forms (Tatevosov 2001). The
same is true for the remaining four Tsezic languages (cf. van den Berg (1993)
for Hunzib, Kibrik and Testelec (2004) for Bezhta and Khalilova (2009) for
Khwarshi).
I suggest that the occurrence of
-n as Perfective converb
represents its basic form from which the occurrence in the Simple Unwitnessed
Past has evolved. This explanation is based on Tatevosov’s (2001) account
of Archi. The situation found in Hinuq, Archi and the other Tsezic languages is
strikingly similar to a diachronic development found in Balkan languages like
Bulgarian. In both Bulgarian and the Nakh-Daghestanian languages the
presence/absence of the auxiliary has to do with the grammatical marking of
epistemic information. In these languages the categories expressing
evidentiality originate from a periphrastic construction with the verb
‘be’. Thus, I propose the following diachronic development: first,
-n has been used in converb clauses with a perfective meaning. This use
has been extended to independent clauses by adding the auxiliary
‘be’ to the converb, which led to periphrastic verb forms formally
and functionally resembling perfects and pluperfects in other languages. One of
the possible diachronic changes of periphrastic morphological forms is the loss
of the auxiliary. At the same time the meaning of the former periphrastic verb
form changed from perfect (or pluperfect) to unwitnessed past. In fact, the
development of verb forms with evidential meaning from perfects is a
cross-linguistically well-attested phenomenon in a number of unrelated languages
such as Bulgarian, Macedonian, Turkish, Georgian, Udmurt, Inuit, Tucano and
Tibetan languages (cf. Dahl 1985: 152-153, Bybee et al. 1994: 95-97).
4.2.3 The Resultative
participle -s
The Resultative participle suffix -
s is used in four
different clause types: (i) as Simple Witnessed Past in independent clauses
(1d), (5b), (9a), (11b), (23), (24b), etc.; (ii) in periphrastic verb forms with
resultative meaning (20a); in complement clauses together with an enclitic, e.g.
with the Abstract enclitic (11b); and (iv) in relative clauses (20b).
(20a)
|
hoboži
|
obu-s-no
|
hes
|
de
|
ƛexwe-s
|
goł
|
hes
|
|
now
|
father-GEN1-and
|
one
|
1SG
|
remain- RES.PTCP
|
be
|
one
|
|
‘I am the only one remaining who the father still
has.’
|
(20b)
|
hayłi
|
maydan-i
|
r-uhe-s-no
|
č’aguyaw-no
|
ħaywan-be
|
|
there
|
glade-IN
|
NHPL-die-RES.PTCP-AND
|
alive-and
|
animal-PL
|
|
q’idi
|
ƛexwe-n
|
|
|
|
down
|
remain-UWPST
|
|
|
|
‘There on the glade dead and living animals lay.’
|
Again the various uses can be distinguished on formal
grounds (by means of auxiliaries or enclitics), or through a difference in
meaning. The Simple Witnessed Past has past time reference and the evidentiality
meaning witnessed, which is absent when this suffix occurs in periphrastic verb
forms or relative clauses as in the examples (20a, b) above. In contrast, when
-s is used in periphrastic verb forms and in relative clauses the suffix
has usually a resultative meaning (20a) that is absent from its use in
complement clauses or as Simple Witnessed Past.
Concerning the diachronic development, I propose that the use of
-s in dependent clauses was basic. Due to the adjectival nature of
participles, they can be used in adjectival predication together with a copula,
which explains the use of this participle in periphrastic verb forms. In this
use its original resultative meaning has been preserved. In the course of time
the copula has been deleted and the originally resultative verb form developed
into a verb form expressing past time reference, a development that has also
been observed for other languages (cf. Bybee et al. 1994, 68-69). Maybe in
contrast to clauses with past time reference headed by the Perfective converb
(Section 4.2.1) that refer to situations not witnessed by the speaker, the
Resultative participle used in independent clauses acquired the evidentiality
value ‘witnessed’. For Akhvakh, another Nakh-Daghestanian language,
Creissels (2009) has proposed a similar diachronic scenario.
4.2.4 The
Masdar
In Caucasian linguistics the term
Masdar refers to
deverbal nouns that have both verbal and nominal properties. It is formed with
the suffix
-nu. With verbs that can take the Infinitive suffix the Masdar
is formed by adding the suffix
-nu to the Infinitive. Verbs that lack the
Infinitive add
-nu directly to the stem, e.g.
Ø-edoː-nu
from
-edoː-
‘work’, or
gaː-nu
from
gaː-
‘drink’.
In Hinuq the Masdar behaves quite unusually. First, it can be used as
the only predicate of an independent sentence with a negative semantics,
referring to an event that is expected to happen, but has still not happened
(21a). In these sentences the copula can be added. If the copula in the Present
tense is added the meaning of the sentence does not change. Instead of the
copula in the Present tense, the same verb with past time reference can be used
(21b). However, the copula must be affirmative; it can never be used in its
negated form.
(21a)
|
[Context: The king is expected to arrive]
|
|
xan
|
žied
|
Ø-aqʼ-a-nu
|
(goɬ)
|
|
khan(I)
|
yet
|
I-come-INF-MSD
|
(be)
|
|
‘The king has not arrived yet.’ (EL)
|
(21b)
|
obu-y
|
hoboži-n
|
rede
|
b-uw-a-nu
|
zoq’we-s |
|
father-ERG
|
now-and
|
wood(III)
|
III-make-INF-MSD
|
be-WPST |
|
‘Father had not yet prepared wood for the winter.’
(EL)
|
Second, the Masdar can be used in clauses that function and
look like relative clauses. Again it has a negative semantics in these clauses
(22).
(22)
|
hadu
|
goɬ
|
[tetu
|
y-iɣ-a-nu]
|
šar-mo-s
|
cen
|
|
|
this
|
be
|
cream(IV)
|
IV-take.away-INF-MSD
|
ball-OBL-GEN1
|
quark
|
|
|
‘This is round cottage cheese from which the cream has not been
taken away.’
|
Third, the Masdar can take case suffixes. For example, it
can function as the Genitive modifier of a noun (23). It can also occur in
argument position of verbs, e.g. in example (14) of Section 3.5. In the nominal
function the Masdar has only affirmative semantics; the case suffixes indicate
its role in the clause.
(23)
|
Ø-iš-a-nu-zo
|
moč-a
|
hayɬoy
|
čay
|
gaː-s
|
|
I-eat-INF-MSD-GEN2
|
place.OBL-IN
|
3SG.MASC.ERG
|
tea
|
drink-WPST
|
|
‘Instead of eating he drank tea.’ (EL)
|
4.3 Categories associated with
finiteness
As mentioned in Section 1.1, there is no accepted definition
of finiteness. Instead, a number of categories and constructions have been
proposed for the definition of finiteness or have been related to finiteness in
one way or another. I will discuss the following categories and constructions
that are relevant for Hinuq:
- tense
- evidentiality
- mood
- aspect
- polarity
- gender/number
agreement
- case marking of
arguments
- overt
subjects
- word
order
- CVB/PTCP markers, case marking on
verbs
- clitics
Other categories that have been used for defining finiteness
in other languages, e.g. person agreement or politeness, do not occur in Hinuq
and will therefore not be taken into account.
4.3.1 Tense and
evidentiality
All simple verb forms occurring in independent clauses
express a temporal reference, i.e. they refer to some moment in the past, in the
present or in the future. In addition, when used in independent main clauses
verbs with the suffixes
-s and
-n have the evidentiality meanings
witnessed and
unwitnessed, respectively. In contrast, when these
forms are used in dependent clauses they do not have their own temporal value
and evidentiality, but get these values from the matrix verb. For example, the
event that the verb form
r-išer-ho in (24a) describes is interpreted
as occurring in the past and being witnessed because the matrix verb carries the
suffix
-s (Simple Witnessed Past). If
r-išer-ho occurred in
an independent clause it would have present time reference. Similarly, in (24b)
the speaker must be a witness of the event described because the main verb has
the Simple Witnessed Past suffix. In contrast to this, the sentence
hayɬoy tʼek tʼotʼerno
used as an independent main clause translates as ‘He apparently read the
book’ with the evidentiality value unwitnessed.
(24b)
|
hayɬoy
|
tʼek
|
tʼotʼer-no
|
ɬaqʼer-iš |
|
3SG.MASC.ERG
|
book
|
read-PFV.CVB
|
finish-WPST |
|
‘He finished reading the book.’ (EL)
|
The verb forms used in adverbial clauses, but not in
independent clauses (i.e. specialized converbs and three participles) lack
evidentiality and absolute temporal reference. They express at most relative
temporal reference, that is, temporal reference in relation to the situation
described by the matrix verb, or no temporal reference at all. For example, the
Terminative converb indicates that the action of the dependent clause marks the
endpoint of the action of the main clause.
(25)
|
me
|
sira
|
[kwatʼizi
|
y-iq-ače]
|
ƛexwe-y-ƛen
|
|
|
|
2SG
|
why
|
be.late
|
II-happen-TERM
|
remain-WPST.Q-QUOT
|
|
|
|
‘Why did you remain till you were late?’
|
4.3.2 Mood and
aspect
Many mood and aspect values carry over from main clauses to
subordinate clauses. Non-indicative moods such as the Imperative and the
Optative occur also in indirect speech contexts:
(26)
|
[xec-o
|
de-ƛen]
|
eƛi-yo |
|
let-IMP
|
1SG-QUOT
|
say-PRS |
|
‘He says, let me.’
|
Another non-indicative mood, the Irrealis conditional, can
be formed from (almost) all TAM forms that also occur in independent
clauses.
[9]
Only in the apodosis of
Irrealis conditional clauses is the occurrence of TAM forms restricted to the
General Tense or the Future in the Past forms.
The aspectual values of many verb forms used in subordinate clauses are
unspecified. But there are two participles that clearly have the aspectual
values of resultative and habitual, which carry over to the periphrastic TAM
forms that are built up from them. In the same vein, all periphrastic TAM forms
containing the Imperfective converb have the aspectual value
‘imperfective’. Consequently, main clauses and dependent clauses
that contain these participles and converbs express the same aspectual
values.
In Hinuq one can build periphrastic verb forms not only with the
auxiliaries
goɬ
‘be’ and
zoq’we- ‘be’, but also with the light verb -
iči-
‘be’ (27a). These constructions refer to ongoing events which do not
have a result or whose results are not important. Similar constructions with the
same light verb are available in adverbial subordination, and they have the same
aspectual meaning of progressive (27b).
(27a)
|
sasaqo
|
nesa
|
tʼek
|
tʼotʼer-ho
|
Ø-iči-yo
|
zoqʼwe-s |
|
morning
|
evening
|
book
|
read-IPFV.CVB
|
I-be-IPFV.CVB
|
be-WPST |
|
‘In the morning, in the evening I (masc.) was reading
books.’
|
(27b)
|
[Ø-iƛʼi-yo
|
Ø-iči-n]
|
hayɬoz
|
ƛʼoqʼar
|
kezi.y.iqqo
|
ked
|
|
I-go-IPFV.CVB
|
I-be-PFV.CVB
|
3SG.MASC.DAT
|
towards
|
meet.II.PRS
|
girl(II)
|
|
‘While he is going, he meets a girl.’
|
4.3.3 Polarity
Not all simple verb forms occurring in independent clauses
can express negative polarity (see Table 3 in Section 2.2). In addition, three
forms contain a negative marker that differs synchronically from the standard
negative marker
-me.
Periphrastic verb forms can be negated by negating the auxiliary. The
only exceptions are forms built with the Masdar. These forms are inherently
negative in their semantics and therefore do not allow the use of a negated
auxiliary.
All participles have a negative counterpart whereas the Infinitive and
the majority of the converbs occur only with affirmative meaning.
4.3.4 Agreement and case
assignment
All verb forms follow the same rules for gender and number
agreement: they agree with the Absolutive argument of their clause. If the
position of the Absolutive argument has been filled by a clause then the matrix
verb takes either the agreement prefix
r- (gender V) or they agree with
the Absolutive argument of the embedded clause. The first possibility, called
‘plain local agreement’ by Polinsky and Potsdam (2001) has been
exemplified in (12c) and (13) of Section 3.5. The second possibility can be seen
in (28) and is called ‘long distance agreement’.
(28)
|
obu-z
|
b-eq’i-yo
|
[Pat’imat
|
iyoz
|
kumak
|
b-uː-ƛʼos-ɬi]
|
|
father-DAT
|
III-know-PRS
|
Patimat
|
mother-DAT
|
help(III)
|
III-do-HAB.PTCP-ABST
|
|
‘The father knows that Patimat will help the mother.’
(EL)
|
If the Absolutive argument of the matrix clause is realized
overtly only in the embedded clause then the matrix verb nevertheless agrees
with this argument, independently of the role (and the case) that the argument
has in the embedded clause (29a). This phenomenon has been called
“Backward control” by Polinsky and Potsdam (2002). Similarly, if the
Absolutive argument of the embedded clause is realized overtly only in the main
clause then the embedded verb agrees with this argument independently of the
role (and the case) that the argument has in the main clause. This can be
observed with relative clauses whose head function as the Absolutive argument of
their relative clause, but occur in a different position (e.g. agent or
recipient) in the matrix clause (29b).
(29a)
|
[ked-i
|
uži
|
zok’-a]
|
y-uɬi-š
|
|
|
|
|
girl(II)-ERG
|
boy
|
beat-INF
|
II-begin-WPST
|
|
|
|
|
‘The girl began to beat the boy.’ (EL)
|
(29b)
|
[uži-ž
|
y-eti-yo
|
goɬa]
|
ked-i
|
r-egi
|
xokʼo-be
|
r-uː-ho
|
|
boy-DAT
|
II-want-IPFV.CVB
|
be.PTCP
|
girl(II)-ERG
|
NPL-good
|
khinkal-PL
|
NPL-make-PRS
|
|
‘The girl who the boy loves makes good khinkal.’
(EL)
|
Verb forms follow the same case assignment patterns in all
clause types. In other words, arguments in dependent clauses get the same cases
assigned as arguments in independent clauses.
If a clause headed by a nominalized verb form occurs in argument
position of a verb the entire clause gets the same case assigned that a lexical
noun would get. For example, arguments of the verbs
boži -iq-
‘believe’ and
šak -iq- ‘doubt’ must take the
Super-Essive case suffix (14).
4.3.5 Overt subject and word
order
Dependent clauses can have their own overtly expressed
subject which is in the case required by the verb, that is, in the Absolutive in
case of intransitive verbs, in the Ergative in case of transitive verbs and in
the Dative in case of experiencer verbs. This is true for all verb forms
occurring in dependent clauses. Examples are (11a, b), (12b), (18) and the first
dependent clause in (24a).
Only a minority of complement taking verbs take exclusively Infinitive/
Purposive converb complements, which require the identity of main clause and
dependent clause subject, e.g. the modal verbs
kʼwezi -iq- and
koƛʼe-
‘be able’
(12b) and the phasal verbs
baybik
-uː-
and
-uɬi-
(29a)
‘begin’. The phasal verbs
ɬaqʼe-
(intr.) and
ɬaqʼer-
(trans.)
‘finish’, ‘end’ take only verbs marked with the
Narrative converb suffix as complements, which also require the identity of
main clause and dependent clause subject (15), (24b).
In case of identical subjects commonly equi-deletion occurs: only one of
the subjects is overtly expressed, mostly the main clause subject (8b), (27b),
but occasionally also in the embedded clause (29a). However, it seems that
equi-deletion in complement clauses is not obligatory, not even in case of
identity of main clause and embedded clause subject (12b).
Converb constructions allow overt identical subjects in the main and the
adverbial clause if one of the overt arguments is a reflexive pronoun (30).
However, these constructions are marginal and hardly ever attested in texts. In
general, coreferential arguments are deleted.
(30)
|
ʡalí
|
konfetbe
|
r-aq’er-ho
|
[zo
|
Ø-aq’e-yo]
|
|
Ali.ERG
|
sweets
|
NPL-bring-PRS
|
REFL.SG
|
I-come-COND
|
|
‘If hei comes Alii brings sweets.’
(EL)
|
To sum up, there is no verb form that obligatorily requires
the deletion of an overt subject. Even embedded clauses headed by an Infinitive
can have an overtly expressed subject.
In both dependent and independent clauses the preferred order is SOV.
Other orders are possible, but dependent clauses are almost exclusively
verb-final. Relative clauses even prohibit any word order other then
verb-final.
4.3.6 Verb forms and clitics
used in subordinate clauses
Case-marking on verbs and special verb forms only used in
dependent clauses are properties associated with nonfiniteness. Hinuq has a
number of specialized converbs and two participles that are only used in
dependent clauses (see groups (iv) and (v) in Section 4.1).
Synchronically at least the Posterior, the Simple Anterior and the
Purposive converb clearly contain case suffixes. The Posterior converb contains
the Lative marker
-r, the Simple Anterior converb contains the
Genitive/Ablative marker
-s, and the Purposive converb the Dative marker
-z. Arguably, the suffix
-ƛʼo
that is found in both the
Posterior and the First Simultaneous converb is synchronically the Super-Essive
marker, with which it is homophonous.
Furthermore, case suffixes can be added to the participles and the
Masdar in order to use them in adverbial clauses (17) or complement clauses
(14).
Hinuq uses two enclitics to mark certain forms of subordination: the
Abstract enclitic
-ɬi
and the
Quotative enclitic
-ƛen.
The former
enclitic occurs on the Resultative and on the Habitual participle when they are
used in complement clauses of knowledge predicates (11b), (13) and (28). The
latter enclitic occurs on all verb forms used in complements of certain psych
verbs (11a).
5. Conclusion
The morphological categories that are most often employed
when referring to finite vs. nonfinite verbs are tense and agreement inflection.
As emphasized in Section 4.3.4, the agreement properties of Hinuq verb forms do
not differ from each other, that is, all verbal forms behave alike.
As for tense, the situation is more complicated. There are a number of
suffixes that occur on verbs that are the only predicate of an independent
clause, on verbs that are used in combination with auxiliaries as the predicate
of an independent clause, and on verbs occurring as predicates of dependent
clauses. Their temporal interpretation varies depending on the predicate/clause
type (Section 4.2.1). But there are also a number of verb forms that occur only
in one predicate/clause type. For instance, specialized converbal forms do not
contain TAM suffixes and as a result do not carry information about the absolute
temporal reference of their clause. Following Bisang’s terminology the
converbs and participles exemplify the “minus-strategy”.
Another inflectional category of verbs, overt polarity, is present in
most but not all verb forms that head independent clauses. That is, two TAM
forms occurring in independent clauses lack a negative counterpart, but they can
be negated by using other TAM forms. For many specialized converbs used in
dependent clauses the situation is even worse: they do not only lack a negative
form, but they can not be replaced by other negative converbs. In other words,
polarity does not help us very much to distinguish clauses or constructions from
each other with respect to their finiteness. This is in accordance with
Givón’s (1990) finiteness-scale of TAM presented in Figure 1 of
Section 1.1, which states that polarity is if at all a weak indicator for
finiteness.
All these facts lead to the conclusion that finiteness cannot be used to
describe the morphological property of a verbal suffix or a verb form in Hinuq.
Similarly, dependent and independent clauses do not usually differ in their
syntactic properties. There are no dependent clauses that ban the occurrence of
overt subjects, and only relative clauses have strict verb-final word order.
Therefore, I will adopt Givón’s (1990) concept of
finiteness as conformity or deviation from the independent clause pattern
(Section 1.1) and order the verbal suffixes of the six groups (Section 4.1)
along the following scale:
independent clauses
|
- suffixes that occur only in independent clauses (i),
(ii)
|
|
|
|
- suffixes in periphrastic verb forms of independent clauses,
and in dependent clauses (ii), (iii), (vi)
|
|
|
dependent clauses
|
- specialized converbs and participles used only in dependent
clauses (iv), (v)
|
To the suffixes occurring only in independent clauses belong
not only all four suffixes of group (ii), but also suffixes of group (ii) when
they are used without any further auxiliary. To the next group, the suffixes
used in periphrastic verb forms and as heads of dependent clauses, belong all
suffixes of the groups (iii) and (vi), but also the suffixes of group (ii). The
last group contains only specialized converbs (iv) and two participles (v)
occurring exclusively in dependent clauses.
Clauses formed with the help of suffixes occurring only in independent
clauses can be called “finite”. In contrast, clauses formed with
specialized converbs and participles occurring only in dependent clauses can be
called “non-finite”. The third group of suffixes can be ranked
somewhere in between the two extremes.
Now, the problem is that suffixes of group (ii) belong to two different
groups at the same time since they can occur in independent and in dependent
clauses. Sometimes there are obvious formal differences between the uses of
group (ii) suffixes in independent and in dependent clauses such as additional
auxiliaries for periphrastic verb forms in independent clauses, the participle
goɬa
in relative clauses or Masdars
with case suffixes in complement clauses. Sometimes there is an obvious semantic
difference distinguishing the occurrences of group (ii) suffixes in independent
clauses from their occurrences in dependent clauses (time reference,
evidentiality, affirmative vs. negative meaning). Complement clauses with
enclitics or in the Irrealis conditional mood represent somewhat intermediate
stages because they often contain TAM forms of independent clauses, but
additionally markers that indicate that these clauses are dependent. For
example, the Abstract enclitic can be interpreted as a kind of nominalization
marker that forms abstract nouns not only from other nouns or adjectives, but
also from clauses. The question remains open whether these clauses should be
called “finite” because they contain TAM forms otherwise restricted
to independent clauses, or “nonfinite” because of the extra
enclitics and particles.
Still there are two clause types that do not really fit into the above
scale. Independent clauses without any overt verb (3.1 and 3.4) apparently
differ from the prototype transitive main clauses.
To sum up, it is possible to set out indisputable independent and
indisputable dependent clauses in Hinuq, but there are some clause types in
between that differ in a variety of ways from the extremes. Finiteness as a
morphological category of the verb has been proven to be useless for Hinuq since
one and the same suffixes occur in dependent and independent clauses.
Abbreviations
I – V gender classes, ABL1 first Ablative, ABST
Abstract, ALOC ‘animate’ location, ANTIP antipassive, AT
location ‘at’, CAUS causative, CONC concessive converb, COND
conditional converb, CVB converb, DAT Dative, DIR Directional, ERG Ergative,
GEN1 first Genitive, GEN2 second Genitive, GT General tense, HAB habitual,
HPL human plural, ILOC ‘inanimate’ location, IN location
‘in(side)’, INF infinitive, INFUT Intentional future, IMP
imperative, IPFV imperfective, IRR Irrealis, LAT Lative, MSD masdar, NEG
negation, NPL nonhuman plural, OBL oblique, PFV perfective, PL plural, POT
potential, PROH prohibitive, PRS present, PST past, PTCP participle, PURP
Purposive converb, Q question, QUOT quotative, REFL reflexive, RES
resultative, SG singular, SIM simultaneous converb, SPR location
‘on’, SUB location ‘under’, TERM Terminative converb,
UWPST Unwitnessed past, WPST Witnessed past
References
Bisang, Walther. 2001. Finite vs. non finite languages. Language
typology and language universals, vol. 2, ed. by Martin Haspelmath, Ekkehard
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Author’s Contact Information:
Diana Forker
Bamberg University
diana.forker@uni-bamberg.de
[1]
In this section I do
not aim at giving a complete overview on the term
finiteness. Instead, I
discuss some of its most relevant aspects, which play a role for the subsequent
analysis of Hinuq. For an extensive introduction to finiteness see Nikolaeva
(2007b) and also the review by Koptjevskaja-Tamm (2009).
[2]
The list is by no means
exhaustive. Sells (2007: 59) lists only (i) and (iii), but additionally two more
possible uses of the term
finite. Koptjevskaja-Tamm (2009: 246) also
mentions (i) and (iii), and additionally
syntactic finiteness. Other
scholars may have other lists.
[3]
The data presented in
this paper has been taken from texts collected in the field by the author, or
elicited. Elicited data is marked with (EL) after the English
translation.
[4]
But intransitive verbs
with a stem-final vowel bear stress on the final vowel in the General tense, but
not in the Imperative (e.g.
-
iƛí-
‘go.gt’ vs.
-
íƛi
-
‘go.imp’, see Table 3 in Section 2.2 above).
[5]
Examples of such
derived abstract nouns are
bičišɬi
‘living’
(from the verb -
iči- ‘be’) and
xodbaru-
ɬi
‘marriage’ (from the compound noun
xod-baru ‘married
couple, lit. ‘husband-wife’). However, the suffix occurs
predominantly on loan words, e.g.
axran-
ɬi
‘guarding’ (from Russ.
oxrana ‘guarding’), or
bac
ʼ
ad-ɬi
‘cleanness’ (from Avar
bacad
‘cleanly’).
[6]
It is not a property of
the Imperfective converb alone that it can be used in relative clauses, but
rather of the combination of the Imperfective converb with the participle of the
copula
goɬa.
[7]
Complement-taking verbs
with the complement clause in direct object position take either the agreement
prefix
r- (gender V / non-human plural) or they agree with the Absolutive
argument of the embedded clause (Section 4.3.4).
[8]
I thank the reviewers
for helping me to clarify this point.
[9]
This refers to the
clauses formed with the Irrealis particle
q’ede (Section
3.2.1).
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