On the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean

Drawing on the layered verb phrase hypothesis, the unexpected adversity imposed on the subject of causative–passives in Japanese will be explained by the loci of -sase and -rare, both of which may instantiate more than one functional heads. This hypothesis also gives an account of the marginal statu...

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Autor principal: Aoyagi Hiroshi
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: De Gruyter 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/e149e2932bb8449ca8cab86d1698c561
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:e149e2932bb8449ca8cab86d1698c5612021-12-05T14:11:00ZOn the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean2300-996910.1515/opli-2021-0004https://doaj.org/article/e149e2932bb8449ca8cab86d1698c5612021-03-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2021-0004https://doaj.org/toc/2300-9969Drawing on the layered verb phrase hypothesis, the unexpected adversity imposed on the subject of causative–passives in Japanese will be explained by the loci of -sase and -rare, both of which may instantiate more than one functional heads. This hypothesis also gives an account of the marginal status of passive–causatives whose passivized subject (=causee) is animate. Turning to Korean, /Hi/ is univocally causative, and its apparent use as passive is the result of Voice–Cause bundling. Furthermore, the possible and impossible uses of /Hi/ and /Hu/ as passive morphology result from their selectional properties.Aoyagi HiroshiDe Gruyterarticlecausativepassivelayered verb phrasebundlingjapanesekoreanPhilology. LinguisticsP1-1091ENOpen Linguistics, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 87-110 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic causative
passive
layered verb phrase
bundling
japanese
korean
Philology. Linguistics
P1-1091
spellingShingle causative
passive
layered verb phrase
bundling
japanese
korean
Philology. Linguistics
P1-1091
Aoyagi Hiroshi
On the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean
description Drawing on the layered verb phrase hypothesis, the unexpected adversity imposed on the subject of causative–passives in Japanese will be explained by the loci of -sase and -rare, both of which may instantiate more than one functional heads. This hypothesis also gives an account of the marginal status of passive–causatives whose passivized subject (=causee) is animate. Turning to Korean, /Hi/ is univocally causative, and its apparent use as passive is the result of Voice–Cause bundling. Furthermore, the possible and impossible uses of /Hi/ and /Hu/ as passive morphology result from their selectional properties.
format article
author Aoyagi Hiroshi
author_facet Aoyagi Hiroshi
author_sort Aoyagi Hiroshi
title On the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean
title_short On the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean
title_full On the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean
title_fullStr On the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean
title_full_unstemmed On the causative and passive morphology in Japanese and Korean
title_sort on the causative and passive morphology in japanese and korean
publisher De Gruyter
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/e149e2932bb8449ca8cab86d1698c561
work_keys_str_mv AT aoyagihiroshi onthecausativeandpassivemorphologyinjapaneseandkorean
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