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E-grāmata: Middle Voice in Baltic

(Vilnius University)
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The fifth volume in the VARGReB series is a monograph presenting a collection of studies on middle-voice grams in Baltic, that is, on a widely ramified family of constructions with different syntactic and semantic properties but sharing a morphological marker of reflexive origin. Though the emphasis is on Baltic, ample attention is given to other languages as well, especially to Slavonic. The book offers many new insights into questions of syntactic and semantic interpretation, correct demarcation and diachronic explanation of middle-voice grams. The relationship between reflexive and middle, the workings of metonymy, changes in syntactic structure and lexical input as factors determining diachronic shifts within the middle-voice domain and transitions from one middle-voice gram to another – these are among the topics discussed in the book, which, beyond its relevance to Baltic and Slavonic scholarship, is also a contribution to the typology of the middle voice.

Recenzijas

This book is the first in-depth study of the middle-voice phenomena in Baltic languages since Geniuiens seminal The typology of reflexives (1987) and builds upon the whole body of theoretical and typological work on voice and related categories that appeared since then. Based on rich empirical data from both contemporary usage as reflected in corpora and historical sources, the book offers a synchronic account of different constructions as well as a number of insights into their diachronic origins, against a broader typological and theoretical background. This is a book to be read by all specialists on reflexives, middles and valency-affecting processes in general, as well as by those interested in grammaticalization paths and historical development of morphosyntactic constructions. -- Peter Arkadiev, Russian Academy & Sciences & Russian State University for the Humanities

Acknowledgement xi
List of grammatical abbreviations
xiii
Preface xv
Chapter 1 Reflexives and middles
1(28)
1.1 Introduction
1(1)
1.2 Reflexive and middle
2(2)
1.3 Explaining split reflexivity and reciprocity
4(2)
1.4 Syntax and semantics
6(5)
1.5 Chronology
11(3)
1.6 Natural reciprocals
14(1)
1.7 Autobenefactive reflexive verbs
15(10)
1.8 Middle-voice markers licenced by prefixation
25(2)
1.9 In conclusion
27(2)
Chapter 2 Metonymy and antimetonymy
29(22)
2.1 The natural reflexive and metonymy
29(1)
2.2 Extended metonymy
30(5)
2.3 Metonymic reflexives and antipassives
35(1)
2.4 Antimetonymic middles in Polish and elsewhere
36(12)
2.5 Antimetonymic middles and antipassives
48(1)
2.6 In conclusion
49(2)
Chapter 3 Antipassive middles
51(32)
3.1 Introduction
51(1)
3.2 Definition
52(2)
3.3 Antipassives, deobjectives and deaccusatives
54(5)
3.4 Deobjectives 1: The behaviour-characterizing use
59(3)
3.5 Deobjectives 2: The activity subtype
62(3)
3.6 Diachrony: The rise of deobjectives
65(2)
3.7 Deaccusatives
67(2)
3.7.1 The locative subtype
67(1)
3.7.2 The instrumental subtype
68(1)
3.8 The functional features of the deaccusative type
69(7)
3.9 Diachrony: Deobjectives and deaccusatives
76(5)
3.10 In conclusion
81(2)
Chapter 4 The permissive middle
83(32)
4.1 The notion of permissive middle
83(2)
4.2 The rise of the permissive middle
85(1)
4.3 Old Lithuanian
85(2)
4.4 Latvian
87(3)
4.5 Two kinds of permissive middles
90(3)
4.6 Syntactic interpretation
93(5)
4.7 Autopermissive complement-taking verbs
98(2)
4.8 Lexical permissives
100(2)
4.9 The permissive middle in Slavonic
102(4)
4.10 Permissives and curatives
106(2)
4.11 Broader outlook
108(7)
Chapter 5 The anticausative
115(34)
5.1 On the notion of anticausative
115(2)
5.2 Argument structure
117(3)
5.3 Surface-impact verbs
120(2)
5.4 Surface-impact verbs and their anticausative derivatives
122(4)
5.5 So-called converse reflexives
126(2)
5.6 Emotive predicates
128(7)
5.7 `Reflection' verbs
135(3)
5.8 Phasal anticausatives
138(1)
5.9 The status of converse reflexives
139(2)
5.10 Unpaired surface-impact anticausatives
141(3)
5.11 Surface-impact verbs elsewhere in grammar
144(4)
5.12 In conclusion
148(1)
Chapter 6 Facilitatives
149(26)
6.1 The notion of facilitatives
149(1)
6.2 The classification of facilitatives
150(7)
6.3 Adverbial modifiers
157(2)
6.4 The expression of the agent and its syntactic status
159(4)
6.5 Facilitatives from intransitives
163(4)
6.6 Impersonal transitive facilitatives
167(3)
6.7 Imperfective and perfective extensions
170(2)
6.8 In conclusion
172(3)
Chapter 7 Further extensions from the facilitative middle
175(28)
7.1 Introduction
175(1)
7.2 The naturally non-volitional type
176(6)
7.3 The achievement type
182(10)
7.4 Non-volitional middles from one-place predicates
192(2)
7.5 The desiderative extension
194(6)
7.6 In conclusion
200(3)
Chapter 8 The coargumental middle
203(22)
8.1 Logophoric middles or coargumental middles
203(2)
8.2 Permissive verbs
205(7)
8.3 Speech-act verbs and verbs of belief
212(8)
8.4 Between speech act verbs and verbs of intention
220(1)
8.5 Desiderative verbs
221(2)
8.6 In conclusion
223(2)
Chapter 9 In conclusion
225(10)
Bibliography 235(8)
Name index 243(2)
Language index 245(2)
Subject index 247