The Sixth
INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MALAY/INDONESIAN LINGUISTICS |
Nirwana Resort Hotel, Bintan Island, Riau, Indonesia
Peter Cole and Minjeong Son University of Delaware and Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology pcole@udel.edu
Indonesian verbs take two suffixes, -kan and -i, which show properties of both causative and applicative morphemes (Kaswanti 1997 inter alia).
While -kan and -i seem to share many properties, they have many differences as well: 1) In ditransitives -kan occurs when the patient is the direct object of the verb:
In contrast, -i is found when the goal is the direct object:
These facts and others were described in detail in Kaswanti (1997). The main problems presented by -kan and -i are the following:
We will argue that -i should be analyzed as an instance of incorporation along the lines of Baker (1988): an abstract preposition is incorporated into the verb, making the object of the preposition the internal object of the derived verb. In contrast, -kan has the effect of adding an internal argument to the argument structure of the verb. This feeds "dative shift", but -kan does not itself cause "dative shift" as does incorporation. Apparent causatives involve a discrepancy between syntactic subcategorization and theta role assignment. They are created when -kan adds an internal argument to a verb that has only a single, internal argument (e.g. unaccusative verb). In unaccusatives, the argument that is assigned the patient theta role cannot be syntactically internal because the verb does not subcategorize for an internal syntactic argument. -Kan adds a new internal argument position, and the patient is realized syntactically in that position. Burzio's Generalization, which we rephrase as (6), explains the causative interpretation:
Putting aside idiosyncratic, lexicalized uses of -kan, we claim that a unified analysis is possible for all productive uses of the suffix. References Baker, Mark (1988). Incorporation. University of Chicago Press. Kaswanti Purwo, Bambang (1997). The direct object in bi-transitive clauses in Indonesian. In: Grammatical Relations. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. |