Positional verbs in Nen
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Evans, Nicholas
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University of Hawaii Press
Abstract
In this paper, I lay out the workings of the rather unusual system of positional
verbs found in Nen, a language of the Morehead-Maro family in Morehead district,
Western Province, Papua New Guinea. Nen is unusual in its lexicalization
patterns: it has very few verbs that are intransitive, with most verbs that tend to
be intransitive cross-linguistically realized as morphologically middle verbs,
including ‘talk’, ‘work’, ‘descend’, and so on. Within the fifty attested morphologically
intransitive verbs, forty-five comprise an interesting class of “positional
verbs,” the subject of this paper; the others are ‘be’, its derivatives ‘come’ and
‘go’ (lit. ‘be hither’ and ‘be thither’), and ‘walk’. Positional verbs denote spatial
positions and postures like ‘be sitting’, ‘be up high’, ‘be erected (of a building)’,
‘be open’, ‘be in a tree-fork’, ‘be at the end of something’. Positional verbs differ from regular verbs in lacking in¿nitives, in possessing
a special “stative” aspect inÀection and an unusual system for building a fourway
number system (building large plurals by combining singular and dual
markers), and in participating in a productive three-way alternation between
positional statives (like ‘be high’), placement transitives (like ‘put up high’), and
get-into-position middles (like ‘get into a high position’). The latter two types are
more like normal verbs (for example, they possess in¿nitives and participate in
the normal TAM series), but they are formally derived from the positionals. The paper concludes by situating the Nen system regionally and typologically.
Similar systems are found in related languages, but with the exception of
the Eastern Torres Strait language Meriam Mer, no comparable system has
been reported anywhere in New Guinea—the “classi¿catory verbs” known
from languages like Ku Waru are quite different, serving primarily to classify
objects rather than to give spatial dispositions. On the other hand, rather similar
systems are found in some parts of Meso-America and the Amazon.
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Oceanic Linguistics
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