The Emergence of Axial Parts

Authors

  • Peter Svenonius CASTL, University of Tromsø

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7557/12.85

Keywords:

Axial Parts, preposition, Place, location, locative, space, adposition, postposition, Kïïtharaka, Kitharaka, Persian, Farsi, French, Korean, Japanese

Abstract

Many languages have specialized locative words or morphemes translating roughly into words like ‘front,’ ‘back,’ ‘top,’ ‘bottom,’ ‘side,’ and so on. Often, these words are used instead of more specialized adpositions to express spatial meanings corresponding to ‘behind,’ ‘above,’ and so on. I argue, on the basis of a cross-linguistic survey of such expressions, that in many cases they motivate a syntactic category which is distinct from both N and P, which I call AxPart for ‘Axial Part’; I show how the category relates to the words which instantiate it, and how the meaning of the construction is derived from the combination of P[lace] elements, AxParts, and the lexical material which expresses them.

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Published

2007-01-10