Causative Constructions in Afaan Oromoo: Formal and semantic perspectives

发布者:宏观语言学发布时间:2020-02-24浏览次数:1

Author:

Eba Teresa Garoma, Girma Tesfaye Tekle

Download

Work Unit:

Jimma University, Ethiopia; Mizan-Tepi University, Ethiopia

Issue:

Vol.7 No.1 (Serial No.10) 2019

Page:

70-96

Date:

2019-08-17

Abstract:

The main objective of this study is to give descriptions of formal and functional aspects of causative constructions in Afaan Oromoo. To achieve the objective, written texts, native speaker informants and introspections are predominantly used as sources of data. The findings reveal that the three structural aspects of causatives- morphological, lexical and syntactic- are used in the language. Morphological causatives are highly productive, and affixes with -s and -i in several combinations as well as -eess are employed for such purposes. Causative Morphemes are detected to derive causatives of basic verb stems of different semantic categories and to involve causations in word-class changing. There are also simple and complex causations in which there are several causatives suffixes, causers and micro-events indicated morphologically and syntactically. Semantically, direct, indirect, and assistive/cooperative causatives are identified. Pseudo-causatives are uncovered as peculiar futures of the language too. There are, even, structures with explicit causative affixes which are called subjectless causatives, but they do not show any causal relations between the participants in the structure.

Key Words:

Afaan Oromoo, morphological causatives, direct vs. indirect causatives

DOI:

doi: 10.26478/ja2019.7.10.5

References:

Comrie, B. 1989. Language universals and linguistic typology [M]. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

CSA. 2007. Summary and statistical report of 2007 population and housing census of Ethiopia [M]. Addis Ababa: UNFPA.

Debela, G. 2010. The semantics of Oromo frontal adpositions[M]. Oslo: University of Oslo PhD Dissertation.

Dubnisky, S., M. R. Lloret & P. Newman. 1988. Lexical and syntactic causatives in Oromo [J]. Language,64(3): 485-500.

Escamilla, R. M. 2012. The syntactic causative construction in Hupa (California Athabaskan) [J]. Rice Working Papers in Linguistics, 3: 1-18.

Kebede, H. 2009. Towards the genetic classification of the Afaan Oromoo dialects [D]. PhD Dissertation. Oslo: University of Oslo.

Kulikov, L. 2001. Causatives [A]. In Martin Haspelmath, Ekkehard König, Wulf Oesterreicher & Wolfgang Raible (eds.), Language typology and language universals [C]. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 886-895.

Lemmens, M. 1998. Lexical perspectives on transitivity and ergativity: Causative constructions in English [M]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Mous, M. 2012. Cushitic [A]. In Zygmunt Frajzyngier & Erin Shay (eds.), The Afroasiatic languages [C]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 342-422.

Owens, J. 1985. A grammar of Harar Oromo[M]. Hamburg: Helmut, Buske.

Shibatani, M. 1973. Lexical versus analytical causatives in Korean [J]. Journal of Linguistics, 9: 281-297.

Shibatani, M. 2001. Introduction: Some basic issues in the grammar of causation [A]. In Masayoshi Shibatani (eds.), The grammar of causation and interpersonal manipulation [C]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 1-22.

Stefanowitsch, A. 2001. Causative constructions in Akawaio [A]. In Masayoshi Shibatani (eds.), The grammar of causation and interpersonal manipulation [C]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 343-372.

Talmy, L. 2000. Towards a cognitive semantics: Concept structuring systems [M]. Cambridge: MIT Press.

Tolemariam, F. 2009. A typology of verbal derivation in Ethiopian Afro-Asiatic languages [M]. Utrecht: LOT.

Wierzbicka, A. 1980. Lingua mentalis: The semantics of natural language [M]. New York: Academic Press.

Yabe, T. 2007. The determinations of a phonological exponent of agentive v in the Oromo morphological causatives [J]. University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics,13(1): 435-448.


  • Macrolinguistics(ISSN 1934-5755,e-ISSN 2473-6376)is an international academic journal w...
  • 1. Authors should submit the original work. This journal uses iThentic...
  • 1. Peer review of this journal consists of three procedures in sequence: initial review ...
  • The Learned Press, 9 East 37th Street, Suite: WL, New York, NY 10016, U.S.APhone: 646-831-8213Fa...

link: