The Asia Minor Greek adpositional cycle: a tale of multiple causation


Autoria(s): Karatsareas, P.
Data(s)

2016

Resumo

This paper examines the interplay of language-internal continuity and external influence in the cyclical development of the Asia Minor Greek adpositional system. The Modern Greek dialects of Asia Minor inherited an adpositional system of the Late Medieval Greek type whereby secondary adpositions regularly combined with primary adpositions to encode spatial region. Secondary adpositions could originally precede simple adpositions ([PREPOSITION + PREPOSITION + NPACC]) or follow the adpositional complement ([PREPOSITION + NPACC + POSTPOSITION]). Asia Minor Greek replicated the structure of Ottoman Turkish postpositional phrases to resolve this variability, fixing the position of secondary adpositions after the complement and thus developing circumpositions of the type [PREPOSITION + NPACC + POSTPOSITION]. Later, some varieties dropped the primary preposition SE from circumpositional phrases, leaving (secondary) postpositions as the only overt relator ([NPACC + POSTPOSITION]) in some environments. In addition, a number of Turkish postpositions were borrowed wholesale, thus enriching the Greek adpositional inventory.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://westminsterresearch.wmin.ac.uk/16467/1/The%2520Asia%2520Minor%2520Greek%2520adpositional%2520cycle%253A%2520a%2520tale%2520of%2520multiple%2520causation.pdf

Karatsareas, P. (2016) The Asia Minor Greek adpositional cycle: a tale of multiple causation. Journal of Greek Linguistics, 16 (1). 47–86. ISSN 1566-5844

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Brill

Relação

http://westminsterresearch.wmin.ac.uk/16467/

Palavras-Chave #Social Sciences and Humanities
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed