Wednesday 13 | 13:00-15:00 | Sesiones de trabajo | |
Sala E. Léger, ISH (sótano) | |
Réunion interna |
This session reviews the subcategories of verb roots, as well as the derivational morphology that derives new members of each class.
Intransitive SA stems behave crosslinguistically like “middle” verbs: semantics can be reflexive, reciprocal, anticausative, passive, antipassive, idiosyncratic (i.e. not predictable from meaning of the transitive verb) and sometimes deponent (no transitive verb identifiable).
There are also a few meaning-changing derivational suffixes, usually coding aspect: most common are the completive (to completely finish) and iterative ‘do multiple times’, but some languages (e.g. Makushi) have innovated others, like inchoative (begin), terminative (stop, finish), conative (try unsuccessfully) and ‘finally’.