Stable and unstable person features: A structural account.

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Abstract

Deictic paradigms show a asymmetry in their diachronic development. While the deictic categories expressed by pronominal and possessive paradigms are overall stable, demonstrative paradigms can undergo a reorganisation that typically results, from a diachronic viewpoint, in a reduction in the number of deictic oppositions encoded in the system. In this paper, I provide an account for these different diachronic behaviours. I assume, with Harbour (2016) i.a., that demonstrative systems are defined by person features, on a par with pronominal and possessive ones. I also posit that these three classes of deictics show structural differences as to how person features are encoded in their internal structure. Thus, revisiting Polinsky’s (2018) intuition that stability is linked to structural salience, I relate the attested diachronic asymmetry to structural differences across deictic classes: specifically, I argue that person features are only salient, and therefore stable, in personal pronouns and in the indexical part of possessives, but that they are not salient, and therefore unstable, in the indexical part of demonstratives.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationNELS 51: Proceedings of the Fifty-First Annual Meeting of the North East Linguistic Society
EditorsAlessa Farinella, Angelica Hill
Place of PublicationAmherst, MA
PublisherGLSA
Pages229-242
Number of pages14
Volume2
Publication statusPublished - May 2021

Keywords

  • person features
  • pronouns
  • possessives
  • demonstratives
  • diachrony
  • contact
  • stability
  • romance languages
  • morphology
  • syntax

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