Chapter 13 - Voice and valence Flashcards
Valence in linguistics is
always a number from one to three. It can be thought of as a semantic notion, a grammatical notion, or a combination of the two
What are valence-adjusting constructions
morphosyntactic constructions that affect the semantic and/or the grammatical valence of a clause
What is semantic value (in relation to valence)
the number of participants in the discourse world scene conventionally evoked by a verb
Grammatical (or syntactic) valence refers to
the number of arguments present in any given clause
What do valence-decreasing constructions do
take a scene that requires two participants and presents it in a frame in which only one participant is in perspective (2 -> 1), or it presents a scene with three participants in a frame with only two in perspective (3 -> 2)
What do valence-increasing constructions do
take a scene that has one or two participants, and present it in a frame in which two or three are in perspective
Types of valence-decreasing constructions
Those that “combine” controlling and affected participants
into a single participant:
REFLEXIVES
RECIPROCALS
MIDDLES
Those that downplay a controlling participant:
PASSIVES
IMPERSONALS
Those that downplay an affected participant:
OBJECT OMISSION
OBJECT DEMOTION
OBJECT INCORPORATION
Types of valence-increasing constructions
Those that add a controlling participant:
CAUSATIVES
Those that upgrade a peripheral participant:
DATIVE SHIFT
Reflexive construction
presents a two-participant scene in which both participants are the same entity, e.g. She saw herself
What is a lexical reflexive tied to
the lexical meaning of a particular verb. For example, the verbs dress, shave, and a few others, when used intransitively imply that the AGENT and PATIENT are the same entity
Analytic reflexives
may also be referred to as syntactic or periphrastic reflexives. Analytic reflexives are expressed by the reflexive pronouns myself, youself, himself, herself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves, and itself in an Object or Oblique role
Reciprocal constructions
prototypical reciprocal has a plural Subject, and indicates that the two or more Subject participants interact symmetrically, e.g., both are AGENT and PATIENT, both are EXPERIENCER and THEME, etc
Lexical reciprocals
verbs for which reciprocity is a built-in component of their meaning. Some lexically reciprocal verbs in English are kiss, meet, and shake hands with
A middle construction is
one that expresses a semantically transitive situation in terms of a process undergone by a PATIENT, rather than an action carried out by a distinct AGENT
Personal passives
constructions for which some specific AGENT is strongly implied, but either is not expressed, or is expressed in an Oblique role. Personal passives in English are all analytic. In English passives, an auxiliary (be or get) plus the past participle of the active verb must be used