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LA MARCATURA DIFFERENZIALE DELL'OGGETTO IN SICILIANO ANTICO (1)

Identifieur interne : 000159 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000158; suivant : 000160

LA MARCATURA DIFFERENZIALE DELL'OGGETTO IN SICILIANO ANTICO (1)

Auteurs : Giorgio Iemmolo

Source :

RBID : Francis:11-0471199

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

Differential object marking (DOM), also known as Prepositional Accusative in Romance Linguistics, is a marked variation in the realisation of the direct object which codes the direct object via a preposition. As in many languages that have a DOM-system, also in Romance the phenomenon is regulated by semantic features of the referents, such as animacy, definiteness and specificity (bossing 1985, Croft 1988). Animate, definite or specific objects receive an object marker, whereas inanimate, indefinite or non-specific objects remain unmarked. After discussing the main theoretical approaches to the phenomenon, I will analyse DOM in Old Sicilian, based primarily on a corpus of data from the Opera del Vocabolario Italiano (OVI) textual database, a corpus of early Italian containing also vernacular texts prior to 1375. I will attempt to show that DOM emerges in pragmatically and semantically marked contexts, namely with personal pronouns in left dislocations. I will then argue that DOM-system in Old Sicilian is motivated by the need for signaling that these objects are atypical 1) at the information structure level insofar as they are primary topics and 2) at the semantic level, because they are high on the animacy and definiteness hierarchies. Subsequently, I will show that in Modern Sicilian the construction has been extended to non-topical objects which share features of topic-worthiness. As a conclusion, I will argue that DOM signals iconically the non-obviousness of the pragmatic and semantic properties of the marked objects (Croft 1988: 174), which are more salient at the perceptual and cognitive level (cf. Givón 1985: 206), as confirmed by the low frequency of animate and definite objects in transitive clauses.

Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)

Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.

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A06       @2 2
A08 01  1  ITA  @1 LA MARCATURA DIFFERENZIALE DELL'OGGETTO IN SICILIANO ANTICO (1)
A11 01  1    @1 IEMMOLO (Giorgio)
A20       @1 185-225
A21       @1 2009
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A24 01      @0 eng
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A44       @0 0000 @1 © 2011 INIST-CNRS. All rights reserved.
A45       @0 3 p.1/4
A47 01  1    @0 11-0471199
A60       @1 P
A61       @0 A
A64 01  1    @0 Archivio glottologico italiano
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C01 01    ENG  @0 Differential object marking (DOM), also known as Prepositional Accusative in Romance Linguistics, is a marked variation in the realisation of the direct object which codes the direct object via a preposition. As in many languages that have a DOM-system, also in Romance the phenomenon is regulated by semantic features of the referents, such as animacy, definiteness and specificity (bossing 1985, Croft 1988). Animate, definite or specific objects receive an object marker, whereas inanimate, indefinite or non-specific objects remain unmarked. After discussing the main theoretical approaches to the phenomenon, I will analyse DOM in Old Sicilian, based primarily on a corpus of data from the Opera del Vocabolario Italiano (OVI) textual database, a corpus of early Italian containing also vernacular texts prior to 1375. I will attempt to show that DOM emerges in pragmatically and semantically marked contexts, namely with personal pronouns in left dislocations. I will then argue that DOM-system in Old Sicilian is motivated by the need for signaling that these objects are atypical 1) at the information structure level insofar as they are primary topics and 2) at the semantic level, because they are high on the animacy and definiteness hierarchies. Subsequently, I will show that in Modern Sicilian the construction has been extended to non-topical objects which share features of topic-worthiness. As a conclusion, I will argue that DOM signals iconically the non-obviousness of the pragmatic and semantic properties of the marked objects (Croft 1988: 174), which are more salient at the perceptual and cognitive level (cf. Givón 1985: 206), as confirmed by the low frequency of animate and definite objects in transitive clauses.
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C03 06  L  FRE  @0 Marquage différentiel de l'objet @4 CD @5 96
C03 06  L  ENG  @0 Differential object marking @4 CD @5 96
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C03 07  L  ENG  @0 Old sicilian @4 CD @5 97
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Format Inist (serveur)

NO : FRANCIS 11-0471199 INIST
OT : LA MARCATURA DIFFERENZIALE DELL'OGGETTO IN SICILIANO ANTICO (1)
AU : IEMMOLO (Giorgio)
DT : Publication en série; Niveau analytique
SO : Archivio glottologico italiano; ISSN 0004-0207; Italie; Da. 2009; Vol. 94; No. 2; Pp. 185-225; Abs. anglais; Bibl. 3 p.1/4
LA : Italien
EA : Differential object marking (DOM), also known as Prepositional Accusative in Romance Linguistics, is a marked variation in the realisation of the direct object which codes the direct object via a preposition. As in many languages that have a DOM-system, also in Romance the phenomenon is regulated by semantic features of the referents, such as animacy, definiteness and specificity (bossing 1985, Croft 1988). Animate, definite or specific objects receive an object marker, whereas inanimate, indefinite or non-specific objects remain unmarked. After discussing the main theoretical approaches to the phenomenon, I will analyse DOM in Old Sicilian, based primarily on a corpus of data from the Opera del Vocabolario Italiano (OVI) textual database, a corpus of early Italian containing also vernacular texts prior to 1375. I will attempt to show that DOM emerges in pragmatically and semantically marked contexts, namely with personal pronouns in left dislocations. I will then argue that DOM-system in Old Sicilian is motivated by the need for signaling that these objects are atypical 1) at the information structure level insofar as they are primary topics and 2) at the semantic level, because they are high on the animacy and definiteness hierarchies. Subsequently, I will show that in Modern Sicilian the construction has been extended to non-topical objects which share features of topic-worthiness. As a conclusion, I will argue that DOM signals iconically the non-obviousness of the pragmatic and semantic properties of the marked objects (Croft 1988: 174), which are more salient at the perceptual and cognitive level (cf. Givón 1985: 206), as confirmed by the low frequency of animate and definite objects in transitive clauses.
CC : 52438; 524
FD : Trait sémantique; Pragmatique; Sémantique; Transitivité; Linguistique historique; Marquage différentiel de l'objet; Vieux sicilien
ED : Semantic feature; Pragmatics; Semantics; Transitivity; Historical linguistics; Differential object marking; Old sicilian
LO : INIST-23727.354000181693840030
ID : 11-0471199

Links to Exploration step

Francis:11-0471199

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