Volume 10 Issue 3 (2012)
DOI:10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.415
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Ditransitive Alignment in Yakima
Sahaptin[1]
Joana Jansen
University of Oregon
The grammatical coding of monotransitive and ditransitive clauses in Sahaptin (Plateau Penutian) demonstrates sensitivity to a range of factors, including animacy, person, topicality and number. The language over-codes participants throughout transitive paradigms, violating principles of economy in both flagging and indexing patterns. For example, a third person agent argument of any monotransitive or ditransitive verb may be case marked in one of three ways, depending on the properties of other participants. In this paper I discuss the categories of ditransitive clauses and describe the multiple ditransitive alignment patterns in the Yakima dialect of Sahaptin.
1. Introduction
This paper examines ditransitive clauses in the Yakima
dialect of Sahaptin, describing three classes of underived ditransitives and two
classes of derived ditransitives. Hierarchies of animacy, topicality and person
affect the formal coding of monotransitive and ditransitive clauses. The
language exhibits monotransitive as well as ditransitive alignment splits,
reflected in the case marking of monotransitive subjects (A) and objects (O),
and ditransitive themes (T) and recipients/goals (R). In some monotransitive and
ditransitive constructions, morphological coding is invariant, while in others
speakers can choose how to code arguments. Both monotransitives and
ditransitives exhibit a high degree of redundancy in participant coding,
resulting in systems that are less than economical.
The Sahaptin and Nez Perce languages comprise the Sahaptian Family,
classified as a member of the Plateau branch of Penutian (DeLancey and Golla
1997). Sahaptin speakers of a number of related dialects live in the southern
plateau region of the Pacific Northwest of the United States, along
Nch’iwána ‘Columbia River’ and its tributaries.
The dialects are mutually intelligible. Rigsby (1965) describes three groups of
Sahaptin dialects: Northeast (NE) dialects, spoken along the Columbia River from
Priest Rapids to the lower Yakima and Snake Rivers; Northwest (NW), spoken
mainly in the Yakima River drainage; and Columbia River (CR), spoken along the
Columbia east of what is now The Dalles, Oregon, and along the Deschutes, John
Day, and Umatilla Rivers.
Sahaptin is a synthetic to polysynthetic language with rich verbal
morphology. The phonemic inventory is similar to other Pacific Northwest
languages and consists of a large set of consonants and small set of vowels.
Stops and affricates are voiceless with a plain and glottalized series.
Grammatical relations are indicated with case-marking, verb agreement and
pronominal enclitics; the language is both head and dependent-marking. Sahaptin
shows hierarchical alignment, hierarchically motivated inverse marking and split
ergativity. Syntactic alignment is primarily accusative. Arguments are often
covert; many clauses consist of the verb only. Word order is flexible, serving
discourse/pragmatic functions.
This paper makes use of data from the Yakima dialect
(NW).[2]
The data are from recorded
and analyzed texts collected by the author and from consultation with two
elders. The language is severely endangered; there are only a handful of fluent
Yakama elders who speak Sahaptin as their first language, all of whom also speak
English. Estimates of number of speakers range from 5 to 25. There are
determined revitalization efforts to return the language to daily use within the
Sahaptin communities. All language data are presented using the Yakima practical
alphabet.[3]
2. Monotransitive
Constructions
There are four subclasses of verbs: intransitive, optionally
transitive, transitive, and ditransitive. A small set of verbs can take both
transitive and intransitive morphology and so fall into the ‘optionally
transitive’ category. Transitivity is morphologically indicated and thus
the transitivity of a verb can be determined by morphological tests.
Grammatical relations in Sahaptin are well-defined, and are
morphologically indicated. The discussion below describes the grammatical
relations of transitive subject and transitive object, here labeled A and O
following Dixon (1994). Transitive combinations are coded morphologically by
verb prefixes, second position enclitics, and, in the case of overt noun phrases
(NP), case markers. Independent pronouns are used for emphasis and
disambiguation only. Of particular interest here, Sahaptin has grammatical
systems that are sensitive to referential hierarchies. In most ways, these
mirror prototypical systems that show sensitivity to an indexability hierarchy
(as discussed by, for example, Nichols 1992, Siewierska 2004,
Zún͂iga 2006) in which 1st
and 2nd persons, i.e., speech act participants (SAP) outrank third
persons, animate entities outrank inanimates, and topical participants outrank
less-topical participants. However, the Sahaptin system exhibits breaks from the
more usual patterns. Like typical inverse direction systems, Sahaptin uses a
verbal inverse marker when second person acts on first
and when an
obviative third person (3OBV) acts on a proximate third person (3PRX). This
marker does not, however, occur when third person acts on an SAP. Like typical
hierarchical alignment, Sahaptin has a set of person markers that specify SAP in
opposition to third and second person in opposition to first. However, there is
not an unambiguous ranking of first and second. Case-marking is also
hierarchy-sensitive, with third person subjects potentially bearing one of two
obviative/ergative markers, depending on the person of the object, and
differential object marking based on animacy and topicality.
The following sections discuss the properties of monotransitive clauses.
The sections are organized by participant combinations, moving from mixed
(SAP/3) to local (SAP/SAP) to non-local (3/3) scenarios. For the purposes of
this paper, only examples with a singular subject are discussed; plurality in
some scenarios overrides person and topicality hierarchies. For example, unlike
singular third person A, plural third person A is not case marked nor does it
co-occur with inverse marking on the verb.
Of importance throughout the paper is the grammatical coding of SAP
arguments, which are indicated by second position pronominal enclitics that
follow the first word of the clause. Case marking of these enclitics displays
neutral alignment, with the same form used for subjects and objects. The
examples below show first person singular enclitic
=nash, as intransitive subject in example (1),
transitive subject in example (2), and object in example (3).
(1)
|
aw nash
wyáɬamayksha
|
|
aw
|
=nash
|
wyá-ɬamayk-sha
|
|
now
|
=1SG
|
while.going-lose-IMPV[4]
|
|
‘Now I am getting lost’
|
(2)
|
ku nash
áḵ’inuta
|
|
ku
|
=nash
|
á-k’ínu-ta
|
|
and
|
=1SG
|
3O-see-FUT
|
|
‘and I will see him/her/them’
|
(3)
|
ku nash
iḵ’ínuta
|
|
ku
|
=nash
|
i-k’ínu-ta
|
|
and
|
=1SG
|
3SG.S/A-see-FUT
|
|
‘and s/he will see me’
|
2.1 Mixed
In clauses with a first or second person subject and a third
person object, the second position pronominal enclitic references the SAP A. The
verb has the prefix
á- (allomorph
áw-
is seen below) indicating a
third person object. If the object is overt it may be (but is not obligatorily)
case marked with the object suffix
-nan (SG),
-inan (DL) or
–maman (PL).
(4)
|
Cháw
nash
ánachʼax̱i
áwitɬʼyawita
ḵ’áx̱numaman.
|
|
chaw
|
=nash
|
ánachʼax̱i
|
áw-ítɬʼyawi-ta
|
ḵʼáx̱nu-maman
|
|
NEG
|
=1SG
|
again
|
3O-kill-FUT
|
prairie.chicken
-OBJ.PL
|
|
‘I'll never again kill prairie chickens’
|
Differential object marking in
Sahaptin is sensitive to animacy and topicality. Third person human objects are
consistently case marked. Animate (non-human) and inanimate objects are
optionally marked.
When a third person acts on an SAP, the pronominal enclitics indicate
the SAP. The verb prefix is the third person singular marker
i-
. The third person NP, if present, takes
the ergative case marker
-nɨm.
(5)
|
íkush
nash
ishapáttawax̱ɨnx̱ana
Xaxíshnɨm
|
|
íkush
|
=nash
|
i-shapá-ttáwax-ɨnx̱a-na
|
Xaxísh-nɨm
|
|
thus
|
=1SG
|
3SG.S/A-CAUS-grow-HAB-PST
|
Xa
xísh
-3>SAP.ERG
|
|
‘In that way,
Xa
xísh
raised me’
|
2.2 Local
When first person acts on second, a complex pronominal
enclitic is used. In configurations with first person singular acting on second
person singular, this complex form is
=mash, seen in (6).
(6)
|
shápnisha
mash
|
|
shápni-sha
|
=mash
|
|
ask-IMPV
|
=1SG>2SG
|
|
‘I’m asking you’
|
In the reverse scenario, when second person singular acts on
first person singular, the second person enclitic
=nam
(here shortened form
=am) is used, along with the prefix
pá-, here called an inverse prefix.
As will be seen below, the prefix
pá-
is also used when 3OBV acts on 3PRX.
(7)
|
páshapnishaam
|
|
pá-shápni-sha=am[5]
|
|
INV-ask-IMPV
=2SG
|
|
‘You’re asking me’
|
Note that in example (7), there is no overt indication
of the first person argument. The combination of prefix and enclitic is what
specifies that the object is first person. If an independent first person
pronoun is used, that pronoun will be in the object case, as in (8).
(8)
|
inák
nam páshapnisha
|
|
inák
|
=nam
|
pá-shápni-sha
|
|
1SG.PN.OBJ
|
=2SG
|
INV-ask-IMPV
|
|
‘You’re asking me’
|
There is not an unambiguous ranking of first and second
persons, as coding systems compete. The inverse verb prefix
pá-,
used when second acts on first, suggests a ranking of first over second. This is
not supported by the pronominal enclitics. Only the second person enclitic is
used when second person acts on first as in examples (7) and (8). And, the complex pronominal
=mash, used when first acts on second as
in example (6), is also used to indicate second
person possession. So, no enclitic used in local scenarios uniquely identifies
first person. This suggests a ranking of second over first.
2.3 Non-local
In 3/3 scenarios speakers choose from two constructions,
labeled here direct and inverse. The Sahaptin system is similar to the
Algonquian prototype, in that third persons are divided into proximate (PRX) and
obviative (OBV) categories.
When the more topical or salient 3PRX is
acted on by the less topical 3OBV, the inverse is
triggered.
[6]
A number of factors
lead to a Yakima speaker’s use of inverse versus direct voice. These fall
under broad areas of topicality, topic switching, empathy and animacy. Speaker
and genre also play a role. (See Rude 1994, Blackburn Morrow 2006, Jansen 2010
for more on the factors conditioning the use of inverse voice in
Sahaptin.)
In (9), a direct clause, the verb is
prefixed with 3SG.S/A prefix
i-. The A is not case marked. The human O
is.
(9)
|
iwáwyax̱ana
myánashmaman wawyaɬá
|
|
i-wáwya-x̱a-na
|
myánash-maman
|
wawyaɬá-Ø
|
|
3SG.S/A-whip-HAB-PST
|
child-OBJ.PL
|
whipman-Ø
|
|
‘the whipman used to whip the children’
|
In example (10), the inverse is indicated by
the verbal prefix
pá- and ergative case-marker -in
marking theA (-yin here as it follows a vowel). If there were a nominal
object in (10), it would necessarily take an
object marker.
(10)
|
Chaw
páḵ'inuta
wisalilɬáyin
|
|
Chaw
|
pá-ḵ'inu-ta
|
wisalilɬá-yin
|
|
NEG
|
INV-see-FUT
|
hunter-3>3.ERG
|
|
‘the hunter will not see them’
|
Animacy of A and O interacts with the use of inverse, in
that topicality and animacy overlap (see Givón 1984). In Sahaptin,
however, inanimate arguments can be either the A or O of an inverse clause, as
seen in the following.
(11)
|
ku kwnak wítx̱uptin
páwɨnpa
|
|
ku
|
kwnak
|
wítx̱upt-in
|
pá-wɨ́np-a
|
|
and
|
there
|
blizzard-3>3.ERG
|
INV-take-PST
|
|
‘and there the bitter blizzard caught them’
|
(12)
|
anakú pátamanwya
íchinak tiichámnan ku pátamanwya
k’usík’usinan
|
|
anakú
|
pá-tamanwi-ya
|
íchinak
|
tiichám-nan
|
|
when
|
INV-create-PST
|
this.OBJ
|
earth-OBJ
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ku
|
pá-tamánwi-ya
|
k’usík’usi-nan
|
|
|
and
|
INV-create-PST
|
dog-OBJ
|
|
|
‘When he created this earth, he also created
dogs.’
|
2.4 Summary of monotransitive
clauses
To sum up, monotransitive clauses reflect a ranking of
participants, with SAP’s outranking third person and 3PRX outranking 3OBV.
There is grammatically obligatory hierarchical alignment in local and mixed
scenarios. Non-local ‘optional’ voice constructions show a direct/
inverse alternation.
Several things in particular stand out about the grammatical coding of
monotransitive constructions. The morphology used for the various scenarios
overlaps, but a unique combination codes each scenario. There are two ergative
case markers, one
(-nɨm) used when
third person acts on an SAP, and a second (-in) used when 3OBV acts on
3PRX.[7]
The inverse marking prefix
pá- is used in both local and non-local constructions. It is, in
fact, the only verb prefix that indexes an SAP argument. However, it is not used
in the core case of inverse directionality when third person acts on an SAP. An
animacy hierarchy is at work in some places but not others. Inanimate As are not
blocked from taking either of the two ergative markers. However, animacy is a
key factor in differential object marking. Finally, Sahaptin displays tripartite
alignment in nominal case marking, with S, A, and O uniquely identified in
certain combinations. These three cases are seen in examples (13) and (14) below,
with (13) showing an unmarked S and (14) showing a marked A and O.
(13)
|
ilalíwashana
Wax̱púuya
|
|
i-lalíwa-sha-na
|
Wax̱púuya-Ø
|
|
3SG.S/A-be.lonely-IMPV-PST
|
Rattlesnake-Ø
|
|
‘Wax̱púuya
(Rattlesnake) was lonely’
|
(14)
|
pátmiyúuna Spilyáyin
Twitʼáayanan
|
|
pá-tmiyúu-na
|
Spilyáy-in
|
Twitʼáaya-nan
|
|
INV-plot.against-PST
|
Coyote
-3>3.ERG
|
Grizzly.Bear
-OBJ
|
|
‘
Spilyáy (Coyote) schemed against
Twitʼáaya
(Grizzly)’
|
Table 1 reviews the morphological coding of monotransitive
clauses across persons.
Table 1: Summary of formal properties of Transitive clauses
with singular A
† Recall that A and O may not be overt, so
case marking may not appear in the clause. These columns indicate what form A
and O will take if overt. Parentheses indicate optionality;
-nan
‘OBJ’ is not obligatory
in some scenarios.
3. Ditransitive
Constructions
In turning now to look at ditransitive constructions, we
continue to see influences of person, animacy and topicality hierarchies.
Ditransitives make use of the same morphosyntax as is described for
monotransitives above with the addition of a dative case marker. Whether the
Recipient/goal (R) or Theme (T) is case-marked the same way as is monotransitive
O varies. (For the purposes of this paper, the roles of Recipient and Goal are
conflated, based on the parallel treatment of these in ditransitives.)
Ditransitive patterns are as follows:
(i) Indirective type: In some ditransitive constructions, the T is
marked as is monotransitive O. So, we see a direct object/indirect object
distinction following Dryer 1986, or indirective alignment as described by
Haspelmath 2005.
(ii) Secundative type: In other constructions, the R is marked as is
monotransitive O, showing a primary/secondary object pattern (Dryer 1986), or
secundative alignment (Haspelmath 2005).
(iii) Neutral type: Finally, in rare instances double object marking
is possible, in which both T and R are marked in the same way as the O of a
monotransitive, showing neutral alignment.
Like the hierarchical alignment and inverse voice systems
described above for monotransitives, the Sahaptin system is split. In some R/T
scenarios a Sahaptin speaker can choose whether to code R and/or T as the object
(that is to say, in the same way as monotransitive O), but sometimes there is an
obligatory coding of either the R or T as the object.
The following sections consider only three-participant clauses that have
the flagging and indexing patterns of the prototypical ditransitives described
in the section 3.1 below. This disregards some three-participant constructions
in which one participant is marked as an instrument, source or location.[8]
The three-participant constructions
included here consist of three underived and two derived classes of ditransitive
verbs. The classes are based on semantic features as well as the grammatical
coding of T and R. The classes are as follows: Class one: ‘give’
type verbs (discussed in Section 3.1); Class two: verbs of placing into (Section
3.2); Class three: verbs of speaking (Section 3.3); Derived class one:
applicatives (Section 3.4); Derived class two: causatives (Section 3.5). Of
particular interest to the discussion are ‘give’ verbs (Section 3.1)
and those derived with the causative (Section 3.5), as these are the classes
that show alternation and choices in coding.
3.1 Grammatical coding of
prototypical ditransitives
This section looks at the coding of T and R in prototypical
ditransitive constructions that follow the pattern of the verb
ní-
‘give’. Examples
below also use
isíkw’a-
‘show’. Other verbs that have the same pattern are verbs of trading,
selling, renting, lending, such as
wámshi-
‘loan, borrow, rent’ and
ɨtáyma-
‘sell’. In these ditransitive clauses, four nominal case markers
are used. Two are the ergative case markers
-nɨm (used with
3>SAP) and
-in (used with 3OBV>3PRX). The object marker
-nan
marks T or R. Dative case marker
-yaw can also mark R. The case marker
-yaw typically indicates motion to or into the noun it is suffixed to. It
implies that a specific destination was reached and/or entered. It also has a
range of more abstract meanings. In some participant combinations, as will be
seen below, arguments are not case marked.
Most typically, one of the non-A arguments in a ditransitive is human
and the other is not. (The rare cases in which both T and R are human will be
addressed below.) When a human is R and T is nonhuman (as is most common), the
human is object-marked. Compare the following monotransitive, example (15), with
the ditransitive in (16). In the monotransitive
clause in (15), the object
tɬ’aax̱w
‘all’
has the plural object marker
–maman
.
The same form is seen in ditransitive example (16), coding the R. With a
non-human T and human R, this coding is obligatory. Rude (1997, 2009) calls this
obligatory dative shift, and it is the most common pattern for this class of
ditransitives.
(15)
|
iwáwtɬʼika
tɬ’aax̱wmaman
|
|
i-wáwtlʼik-a
|
tɬ’aax̱w-maman
|
|
3SG.S/A-beat.to.death-PST
|
all-PL.OBJ
|
|
‘he beat everyone to death’
|
(16)
|
tɬ’aax̱wmaman
iníya tkwátat
|
|
tɬ’aax̱w-maman
|
i-ní-ya
|
tkwátat
|
|
all-OBJ
|
3SG.S/A-give-PST
|
food
|
|
‘he gave everyone food’
|
Ditransitives with a human T are very uncommon. In addition,
in Sahaptin participants are often covert. For these reasons, the discussion
here of constructions in which T and R are both human and overtly expressed
relies on a limited number of elicited examples.
A second pattern of obligatory coding in ditransitive clauses occurs
when the theme is a speech act participant. An SAP theme is always the
grammatical object. It is necessarily coded with the second position pronominal
enclitic, indicating that it is a core argument of the verb, as seen in the
monotransitive examples in the preceding section. If independent pronouns are
used, as in the examples below, the object pronoun is used to reference the T.
The R, if overt, is marked by a pronoun in the dative case or by dative case
marking on a noun. If the referent is human, the genitive marker
-mí precedes the benefactive, dative, allative, ablative,
instrumental, and locative case endings. This serves in ditransitives to further
mark the R as human.
The following examples present clauses with SAP themes. Independent
pronouns and clitics indicate T and R.
(17)
|
inák nash iníya imyúuk
|
|
inák
|
=nash
|
i-ní-ya
|
imyúuk
|
|
1SG.PN.OBJ
|
=1SG
|
3SG.S/A-give-PST
|
2SG.PN.DAT
|
|
‘s/he gave me to you’
|
(18)
|
imák nam iníya
ayatmíyaw
|
|
imák
|
=nam
|
i-ní-ya
|
áyat-mí-yaw
|
|
2SG.PN.OBJ
|
=2SG
|
3SG.S/A-give-PST
|
woman-GEN-DAT
|
|
‘s/he gave you to the woman’
|
The grammatical coding of T and R in the preceding examples
is obligatory. A T whose referent is an SAP is always encoded as the object.
However, if T is third person and both arguments are human, there are
two possibilities. Either T or R can be marked as the grammatical object, so,
either an indirective or secundative pattern is grammatical. If R is the
grammatical object, as in the following, T is not case marked. Below,
ɨwínsh
‘man’ is
unmarked.
(19)
|
awisíkw’anaash
ɨwínsh áyatnan
|
|
áw-isíkw’a-na=nash
|
ɨwínsh
|
áyat-nan
|
|
3O-show-PST=1SG
|
man
|
woman-OBJ
|
|
‘I showed the woman the man ’
|
If the T is marked as the object, as in (20), the R
is marked with dative
–yaw
.
(20)
|
i’isíkw’ana[9]
ɨwínshnan ayatmíyaw
|
|
i-isíkw’a-na
|
ɨwínsh-nan
|
ayat-mí-yaw
|
|
3SG.S/A-show-PST
|
man-OBJ
|
woman-GEN-DAT
|
|
‘s/he showed the man to the woman ’
|
If the R is an SAP and the T is third person human, the
coding of T and R is the same as seen in the previous scenario. If the T is the
grammatical object, indicated below with object case marking on
ɨwínsh
‘man’, then
the overt SAP R is in the dative case.
(21)
|
ɨwínshnan
i’isíkw’ana inmíyaw
|
|
ɨwínsh-nan
|
i-isíkw’a-na
|
inmíyaw
|
|
man-OBJ
|
3SG.S/A-show-PST
|
1SG.PN.DAT
|
|
‘s/he showed the man to me’
|
If the SAP R is indexed with a pronominal enclitic, it is
the grammatical object and the third person T is unmarked.
(22)
|
ɨwínsh nash
i’isíkw’ana
|
|
ɨwínsh
|
=nash
|
i-isíkw’a-na
|
|
man
|
=1SG
|
3SG.S/A-show-PST
|
|
‘They showed me the man ’
|
The above examples and discussion have looked at
‘give’-class ditransitive constructions. Within this class, there
are a variety of case-marking patterns, some obligatory and some optional. We
see that person and animacy affect the coding of T and R arguments in these
ditransitives. Topicality also has an effect. Rude (1997, 2009) reviews behavior
and control criteria for objecthood in Sahaptin ditransitives and concludes that
the grammatical objects of ditransitives have the properties of objects of
monotransitive clauses. In the cases where there are alternate possibilities for
coding in ditransitives, Rude’s analysis is that the grammatical object is
being highlighted, and the unmarked or dative-marked noun is less important. We
will now look at additional classes of verbs.
3.2 Class two: verbs of
putting
A second set of three-participant verbs lexically requires
the dative to be used to mark R. These have broad meanings surrounding putting,
placing, throwing, and attaching. The T is differentially marked as the object.
The result is a three-participant indirective construction with A unmarked or
marked ergative; T unmarked or marked as the object, and R marked dative. The
indexing and flagging on (23) below is the same as the
‘give’ example in (20) above (although the non-human goal in (23) does
not take the genitive as well as the dative case marker).
(23)
|
Uyt ɨpáx̱nan áyat patamaníix̱a
chíishyaw
|
|
uyt
|
ɨpáx̱-nan
|
áyat
|
vi-tamaníi-x̱a
|
chíish-yaw
|
|
|
first
|
hide-OBJ
|
woman
|
3SG.S/A-throw.in.water-HAB
|
water-DAT
|
|
|
‘First the woman puts the hide in water’
|
Object marking of T is not required. Whether or not T is
marked, R retains dative marking. The example below, from the same text, has the
same verb as in (23) with a dative R and an
unmarked T.
(24)
|
Yaamashmí ɨpáx̱ áyat
itamaníix̱a tkwsáyyaw
|
|
yaamashmí
|
ɨpáx̱
|
áyat
|
itamaníix̱a
|
tkwsáy-yaw
|
|
mule.deer-GEN
|
hide
|
woman
|
3SG.S/A-throw.in.water-HAB
|
bucket-DAT
|
|
‘Women throw the deer hide into a container’
|
There are no text examples with a human T and human R for
these verbs; elicited examples also mark R with the dative if the referent is
human.
(25)
|
itamáwaykta myánashnan
ayatmíyaw
|
|
i-tamáwayk-ta
|
myánash-nan
|
ayat-mí-yaw.
|
|
3SG.S/A-throw.across-FUT
|
child-OBJ
|
woman-GEN-DAT
|
|
‘s/he will throw the child across to the woman’
|
So, unlike the ‘give’ class, this class does not
show an alternation between indirective and secundative alignment.
3.3 Class three: verbs of
speaking
Verbs of speaking, telling and asking occur only with an
inanimate T and an animate R. The T is the thing said while the R, encoded as
the object, is the person spoken to. The alignment is secundative. In (26),
áyat
‘woman’ has the
object marker
–nan.
íkw’ak
‘that’ is
the absolutive form of the distal demonstrative.
(26)
|
ku íkw’ak
ɨ́na
ḵʼáx̱nu áyatnan
|
|
ku
|
íkw’ak
|
ɨ́n-a
|
ḵʼáx̱nu
|
áyat-nan
|
|
and
|
that
|
tell-PST
|
prairie.chicken
|
woman-OBJ
|
|
‘Prairie chicken said that to his wife’
|
Text examples show that a subclass of verbs exists in which
something asked for, thanked for or prayed for is optionally marked with dative
–yaw
. The dative marker is seen in (27),
however it is not present in (28), a clause using the same verb
and from the same speaker.
(27)
|
áwatɬ’awyaash
nch’ínch’imaman
piimyúuk
sápsikw’atyaw
|
|
áw-atɬ’awi-ya=ash
|
nch’ínch’imaman
|
piimyúuk
|
sápsikw’at-yaw
|
|
3O-ask.for-PST=1SG
|
elder-PL.OBJ
|
their.DAT
|
teaching-DAT
|
|
‘I asked the elders for their teachings’
|
(28)
|
áwatɬʼawita
nam sápsikwʼat nchʼínchʼimaman
ttáwax̱tmaman
|
|
áw-atɬʼáwi-ta=nam
|
sápsikwʼat-Ø
|
nchʼínchʼi-maman
|
ttáwax̱t-maman
|
|
3O-ask.for-FUT=2SG
|
teaching-Ø
|
elder-PL.OBJ
|
family-PL.OBJ
|
|
‘you will ask the family elders for their
teaching’
|
3.4 Derived: Applicatives
Applicatives add a syntactic object to the clause. These
added arguments are benefactor/ possessor
(-ani), goal
(-uu) or associative
(-twíi). The added argument, if
overtly expressed by a noun, is necessarily marked with the object marker
-nan. This added argument is almost always
human; I have only a few examples of a (non-legendary) animal with a prominent
role in a text being added as an object via an applicative construction.
Inanimates are never treated this way. The following example shows the use of
applicatives to derive a monotransitive from intransitive
walptáyk-
‘sing’.
(29)
|
iwalptáykanisha
Chúulinan
|
|
i-walptáyk-ani-sha
|
Chúuli-nan
|
|
3SG.S/A-sing-APPL-IMPV
|
Julie-OBJ
|
|
‘s/he is singing for Julie’ or ‘s/he is singing
Julie’s song’
|
|
|
|
|
iwalptáykuusha
Chúulinan
|
|
|
‘s/he is singing to Julie’
|
|
|
|
iwalptáyktwiisha
Chúulinan
|
|
|
‘s/he is singing with Julie’
|
Applicatives also add arguments to monotransitive verbs,
deriving ditransitives. The end result is that a human/animate argument becomes
the grammatical object and any previous object is ‘demoted’ and left
unmarked. Double object marking does not occur, nor is any other case marker
used on the demoted object.
In (30) below, the applicative
aní- adds an object to a transitive verb. The benefactor is marked
as the object. In (31), a possessor is added, using
the same applicative. The possessor is case marked as the object; the unmarked
is the inanimate possessed thing.
(30)
|
ku paníchanix̱ana
awkú pawawyaɬánan
|
|
kú
|
pa-ních-ani-x̱a-na
|
awkú
|
pawawyaɬá-nan
|
|
and
|
3PL.S/A-put-APPL-HAB-PST
|
then
|
whipman-OBJ
|
|
‘and they would put some away then for the
whipman’
|
(31)
|
paḵ’ínunaniya
wátiksh Spilyáynan
|
|
pa-ḵ’ínu-nani-ya
|
wátiksh
|
Spilyáy-nan.
|
|
|
3PL.S/A -see-APPL -PST
|
tracks
|
Coyote-OBJ
|
|
|
‘They saw Coyote’s tracks.’
|
Example (32) shows the applicative
–uu
(here
-núu) adding a goal to a
monotransitive verb, resulting in a ditransitive. This applicative was seen in (29) adding
a more abstract addressee, but its core meaning refers to the physical location
of the added human argument. The human goal is object marked; the O of the
original clause is unmarked.
(32)
|
awat’anúunaash
shp’aw áyatnan
|
|
á-wát’a-núu-na=ash
|
shp’aw
|
áyat-nan
|
|
3O-hit-APPL-PST=1SG
|
ball
|
woman-OBJ
|
|
‘I hit the ball to the woman’
|
The associative applicative is seen in (33) with
the monotransitive verb
twána-
‘follow’. The grammatical object is the added argument.
(33)
|
itwanatwíishana áyat
ɨwínshnan
|
|
i-twána-twíi-sha-na
|
áyat
|
iwínsh-nan
|
|
3SG-follow-APPL-IMPV-PST
|
woman
|
man-OBJ
|
|
‘S/he with the man was following the woman’
|
There are no alternations in marking in the class of
ditransitives derived by applicatives.
3.5 Derived:
Causatives
The causative prefix
shapá-
alters the inherent
transitivity of a verb by adding an A (marked as is any other A) to the clause.
shapá-
derives monotransitives from
intransitives, and ditransitives from monotransitives. In monotransitive
causatives, the causee becomes the grammatical object. Example (34) shows
the intransitive verb
tux-
‘return, return home’. The first person singular subject is
indicated with the enclitic
=nash. When
the causative prefix is added, as in (35), the third person A is
indicated by the verb prefix
i-. The first
person object is indicated with
=nash
.
(34)
|
aw nash
túxsha
|
|
aw
|
=nash
|
túx-sha
|
|
now
|
=1SG
|
go.back-IMPV
|
|
‘I’m going home now’
|
(35)
|
ishapátuxnɨmshnash
|
|
i-shapá-túx-nɨm-sh=nash
|
|
3SG.S/A-CAUS-go.back-CSL-PPF=1SG
|
|
‘he has made me come back’
|
The causative codes successful manipulation and can indicate
a range of action from stronger ‘make’ or ‘force’ to
less forceful ‘have’ or ‘let’.
The following examples show causatives added to monotransitive verbs. In
the derived ditransitive, most often the causee (the A of the original clause)
becomes the marked object, with the third argument (the O of the original
clause) unmarked. As has been seen throughout, animacy is a key factor. If the O
of the original clause is non-human and the causee is human, the causee is
obligatorily marked and the original O left unmarked, as in (36).
(36)
|
awkú nash
áshapa’imaɬaka áyatnan
ɨníit
|
|
awkú=nash
|
á-shapá-ímaɬak-a
|
áyat-nan
|
ɨníit
|
|
then=1SG
|
3O-CAUS-clean-PST
|
woman-OBJ
|
house
|
|
‘I had the woman clean the house’
|
In example (37)
sapsíkwʼa-
‘teach’
is lexicalized, but its form is analyzable as
sáp-isíkwʼa
‘CAUS
.PL-show’.
(37)
|
ásapsikwʼanx̱aash
íchi myánashmaman
|
|
á-sápsikwʼa-nx̱a=ash
|
íchi
|
myánash-maman
|
|
3O-teach-HAB=1SG
|
this
|
child-3PL.OBJ
|
|
‘I teach this to the children’
|
In the preceding examples we see a lack of alternation in
the case marking: one argument is human, the second is not, and the human
participant is case marked as the object. The following examples show the
patterns that occur when both the A of the original clause (the causee) and the
O of the original clause are human. Again, since phrases with three human
arguments do not typically show up in discourse, many of these grammatically
acceptable examples are somewhat odd to speakers.
When the A of the original clause is human and the O of the original
clause is human and third person, the same possibility exists as in the
‘give’ class. Either the causee or the O of the original clause can
be object-marked with
-nan. Typically it will be the causee. The O of the
original clause is unmarked. This patterns with the secundative
‘give’ class examples in which the R is object-marked and the T
unmarked, seen in (19) and (22) above.
(38)
|
awkú nash áshapanaktkwanina
myánash áyatnan
|
|
awkú=nash
|
á-shapá-náktkwanin-a
|
myánash
|
áyat-nan
|
|
then=1SG
|
3O-CAUS-care.for-PST
|
child
|
woman-OBJ
|
|
‘I had the woman take care of the child’
|
If instead the grammatical object of the derived
ditransitive is the O of the original clause, the causee is marked dative.
Example (39) mirrors (20) and (21) in
morphological coding, with the causee marked as R.
(39)
|
awkú nash áshapanaktkwanina
myánashnan ayatmíyaw
|
|
awkú=nash
|
á-shapá-náktkwanin-a
|
myánash-nan
|
ayat-mí-yaw
|
|
then=1SG
|
3O-CAUS-care.for-PST
|
child-OBJ
|
woman-GEN-DAT
|
|
‘I had the child cared for by the woman’
|
Unlike the ‘give’ class, we find examples of
causative ditransitives with double object marking in which roles are
differentiated only by word order. The causee precedes the O of the original
clause.
(40)
|
awkú nash áshapanaktkwanina
áyatnan myánashnan
|
|
awkú
|
=nash
|
á-shapá-náktkwanin-a
|
áyat-nan
|
myánash-nan
|
|
then
|
=1SG
|
3O-CAUS-care.for-PST
|
woman-OBJ
|
child-OBJ
|
|
‘I had the woman take care of the child’
|
I could elicit these examples, but they were odd to
consultants and are not found in texts. Note that this is the only instance in
Sahaptin in which word order determines grammatical relations (see Rude 2009).
Recall that in ‘give’ class verbs, an SAP T is necessarily
the grammatical object, as seen in (17) and (18) above. In causative
ditransitives, SAP’s again have special status with regards to object
marking, although this is not the same pattern as with ‘give’ verbs.
An SAP that is the O of the original clause can be marked one of two ways in a
causative ditransitive. If it is the grammatical object, coded by an enclitic,
the causee is marked with the dative.
(41)
|
ishapánaktkwaninaash
ɨwínshmíyaw
|
|
i-shapá-náktkwanin-a=ash
|
ɨwínsh-mí-yaw
|
|
3SG.S/A-CAUS-care.for-PST=1SG
|
man-GEN-DAT
|
|
‘s/he had me cared for by the man’
|
The first person object pronoun
inák
could be used in the above
clause, yielding
inák nash
ishapánaktkwanina ɨwinshmíyaw.
A second construction used when an SAP is the O of the original clause
marks the causee as the object, seen below in the object case marker on
ɨwínsh
‘man’. The
SAP is then not indicated by a second position enclitic. However, the SAP object
pronoun is used, forming a construction with double object marking.
(42)
|
ishapánaktkwanina
ɨwínshnan inák
|
|
i-shapá-náktkwanin-a
|
ɨwínsh-nan
|
inák
|
|
3SG.S/A-CAUS-care.for-PST
|
man-OBJ
|
1SG.PN.OBJ
|
|
‘s/he had the man care for me’
|
Since the SAP enclitic is not present, the SAP in the above
example is downgraded—not a ‘true’ grammatical object. While
grammatical, the double object constructions are not preferred. Speakers prefer (41) to (42), and
can readily present more natural periphrastic alternatives (e.g. ‘She
asked the man. He cared for me’). As for behavior and control criteria in
causative constructions with two objects marked, the causee (the A of the
original clause) retains object properties (Rude 1997, 2009).
4. Summary and
Conclusions
We have seen in the sections above that Yakima Sahaptin has
multiple monotransitive and ditransitive constructions. Looking at case-marking
of monotransitives, we find a tripartite system. In terms of ditransitive
alignment, again considering case-marking, the language exhibits all the
alignment patterns described in Haspelmath (2005), and in this way could be
described as showing tripartite ditransitive alignment as well. Two of the
classes described here, the ‘give’ verbs and ditransitives derived
with the causative prefix
shapá-,
show class-internal variation.
Haspelmath gives evidence that for the most part within languages, the
ditransitive alignment type used is independent of the monotransitive alignment
type (2007, 6). Sahaptin shows a parallel between monotransitive alignment and
ditransitive alignment in that the language over-codes participants; multiple
cues point to each referent. In speaking of tripartite systems such as
Sahaptin’s, Mithun (1999) suggests that their rarity has to do with the
fact that is it not maximally efficient, as only two arguments need to be
distinguished in any given clause (see also Comrie 1978). This lack of economy
in monotransitives is seen in the argument coding of ditransitives in Sahaptin,
in which the following are all case-marking possibilities: T=Ø, R=OBJ;
T=OBJ, R=DAT; T=Ø, R=DAT; T=OBJ, R=OBJ. Table 2 presents the
possibilities for the two alternating classes of three participant
verbs.
Table 2: Alternating classes of three participant
verbs
Haspelmath (2007), looking only at ‘give’-verbs
across languages, discusses the tendency for economical flagging to predominate,
and points to Sahaptin as a counter-example (11). This paper broadens the verb
classes discussed, and shows additional ways in which Sahaptin violates the
principle of economy.
Hierarchies of person, animacy and topicality affect both monotransitive
and ditransitive clauses in Sahaptin. In addition, the language contains
obligatory as well as optional monotransitive and ditransitive constructions. In
monotransitives, SAP/SAP and 3/SAP constructions are fixed-choice, based on a
person-hierarchy. In the ditransitive ‘give’ class, a person-based
hierarchy is apparent in that an SAP T must be the grammatical object. An
animacy hierarchy plays a role in monotransitive differential object marking, in
which a human object is case-marked, while an animate or non-human argument is
optionally marked. In the most typical ditransitives, the T is non-human and
unmarked, and the human R is necessarily case marked as the object. When T is
human and R is not, it is the T that will have the object case marker. Thus the
language also exhibits differential R marking (see
Kittilä 2008).
Monotransitive 3/3 constructions give speakers a choice of two coding
strategies. The use of the inverse as opposed to the direct voice is broadly
based on a topicality hierarchy. Similarly, ‘give’-class
ditransitives with a third person human theme and a human recipient allow
speakers to code either the R or the T as the grammatical object. Causative
ditransitives also allow for this choice, with no person restrictions. More work
is called for to determine what conditions this coding choice. Rude (1997)
suggests it is based on topicality, with the object-marked T or R being the
highlighted participant. This corresponds to Haspelmath’s claim that R is
more likely to be specially-marked the lower it is on animacy, definiteness, and
person scales (2007, 83). Determining the specific factors that condition the
inverse/direct alternation within monotransitives may shed light on ditransitive
alternations as well.
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Author’s Contact Information:
Joana Jansen
Department of Linguistics, University of Oregon
1629 Moss Street
Eugene, Oregon 97403
jjansen@uoregon.edu
[1]
I thank the European
Science Foundation, the Jacobs Fund and the Endangered Languages Documentation
Programme for their support of this research and fieldwork contributing to this
research. The feedback of Eva van Lier has significantly improved this paper, as
have the comments of two anonymous reviewers. Scott DeLancey, Spike Gildea, and
Noel Rude’s input is gratefully acknowledged. I also thank and acknowledge
my Yakima Sahaptin consultants. All errors and omissions are my own.
[2]
Speech community
members refer to the dialects by their individual names, or by the collective
terms Ichishkíin or Sahaptin. The Yakama Nation began to use the spelling
Yakama in 1994. I use the spelling Yakima to refer to the dialect described
here, and Yakama when referring to the Yakama Nation and members of the Yakama
Nation. My primary collaborator, Virginia Beavert, uses the spelling Yakima
because previous elders chose iiyaakíi’ma as the best
representation of the name of the language and tribe (Beavert-Martin 1999).
Here, I follow her guidance and preference.
[3]
The differences between
the Yakima practical alphabet and the Americanist alphabet are: (1) The Yakima
practical alphabet uses an underscored (k)
(k̠) for uvular stop q, and an underscored x
(x̠) for uvular fricative
χ; (2) digraphs used in the Yakima alphabet
are: sh–š, ch–č, tɬ-ƛ, kw–kw,
x̠-χw.
[4]
Abbreviations are as
follows: 1 first person, 2 second person, 3 third person, A agent, ABS
absolutive, APPL applicative, CAUS causative, CSL cislocative, DAT dative, DIR
direct, DL dual, ERG ergative, FUT future, GEN genitive, HAB habitual, HUM
human, IMPV imperfective, INV inverse, NEG negative, O object, OBJ object, OBV
obviative, PL plural, PN pronoun, PPF present perfect, PRX proximate, PST past,
R recipient, S/A subject of intransitive/agent of transitive, SAP speech act
participant, SG singular, T theme.
[5]
There is one primary
stress per spoken word, indicated here with an acute accent in the transcription
for words of more than one syllable. The morpheme break line indicates roots and
affixes with inherent stress. See Hargus and Beavert 2002, 2006 for more
information about Yakima Sahaptin stress.
[6]
The morphosyntax of
Algonquian languages is not necessarily as neatly organized as this suggests,
see Rhodes 1994; Zún͂iga 2008.
[7]
Scott DeLancey
(personal communication) proposes that this pattern of ergative case marking is
not attested elsewhere and may be unique to Sahaptin.
[8]
Most of the
three-participant constructions this excludes do not occur with a human T and R
and they show no alternations in marking; the location, source or instrument is
case-marked as such. Verbs of deprivation
(tyanɨ́p-
take by force,
páxwi-
‘steal’) can occur with human T and R. They follow the same
obligatory and optional patterns of alternation as ‘give’-type verbs
in that source or theme may be marked as the object, but the alternation is with
the ablative rather than the dative. Yakima consultants felt a slight meaning
difference between a semantic source marked OBJ and the same source marked ABL,
with the examples in which the source was marked by ablative rather suggesting a
physical location (for example, taken by force ‘from the woman’s
place’ vs. ‘from the woman’). See Rude 1997 for CR and NE
Sahaptin examples.
[9]
The 3rd
person singular prefix
i-
often deletes
before a vowel-initial verb, but it was retained in these elicited examples.
|