What is it about?

This is a collection of 17 articles presented at the workshop on 'Grammatical Changes in Indo-European Languages' at the XVIIIth International Conference on Historical Linguistics (Montreal 2007) edited by Vit Bubenik, John Hewson and Sarah Rose. It is divided into 5 sections: A. Gender, Animacy and Number (5 articles) B. Definiteness, Case and Prepositions (3 articles) C. Tense/Aspect and Diathesis (4 articles) D. Morphosyntax (4 articles) E. Reconstruction of Inflectional Categories in Indo-European Languages (1 article)

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Why is it important?

This colletion is a product of a group of scholars who have been working on new directions in Historical Linguistics focusing on questions of grammatical change and the central issue of grammaticalization. Several studies examine particular problems in a specific language, but often with implications for the IE phylum as a whole, above all in terms of long range grammatical changes in the developemnt of gender differences, strategies of definiteness and the status of prepositional phrase, and the syntax of the verbal diathesis and tense/aspect.

Perspectives

A central motif in this collective effort reflects shifting relevance of morphology to syntax, and syntax to morphology. Referring to individual papers - among others- S.Luraghi in her paper on 'The origin of the feminine gender in PIE" maintains that there is no necessary relation between the collective and the feminine gender and proposes a new scenario explicating the developemnt from the original suffix deriving abstract nouns. B. Bauer in her paper on 'Strategies of definiteness in Latin' concludes that various nominal derivational processes and partitive adjectival constructions used to indicate 'degrees' of definiteness and were thus important forerunners of definite articles in Latin/Romance. V. Bubenik in his paper 'The rise and developemnt of the possessive construction in Middle Iranian' pinpoints some parallels with the development of the genitival construction in Albanian which reflects an earlier state of affairs resembling the relative pronoun of the Old Iranian; this intermediate scenario is now lost in Modern Persian whose ezafe particle is caseless and genderless. H. Andersen in 'On the origin of the Slavic aspect' examines the development of Slavic aspects from a new point of view combining comparative and internal analyses with the perspective of dialect geography. Unlike the traditional approaches based on the all-pervading parameter of 'perfectivity' he acknowledges several 'subaspects' (Determinate/Indeterminate, Imperfect/Aorist, Retrospective/Absolute, and Prospective/Actual). J. Barddal and E. Eythorsson in their paper 'The origin of the oblique-subject construction' conclude that PIE was a stative-active langauge, either a Split-S or a Fluid-S language, in which a subset of 'syntactic subjects' is case-marked in the same way as objects, and that 'oblique subjects' were a natural part of the original alignment system. Lively debate surrounding these issues is ongoing with an 'ammunition' from other language phyla.

Dr Vit M. Bubenik
Memorial University of Newfoundland

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This page is a summary of: Grammatical Change in Indo-European Languages, July 2009, John Benjamins,
DOI: 10.1075/cilt.305.
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