Article In:
Journal of Historical Linguistics: Online-First ArticlesPosition-dependent polarity in the Alor-Pantar languages and its origins
Multiple members of the Alor-Pantar group of Papuan languages display a cross-linguistically unusual pattern
whereby certain grammatical words in the domain of phasal polarity yield an affirmative statement when standing before the
predicate, whereas the occurrence of the same items after the predicate vests the clause with negative polarity. In this article,
we describe this phenomenon in its different manifestations and compare it to negation and phasal polarity constructions
reconstructable to Proto-Alor-Pantar. While position-dependent polarity in the domain of phasal polarity is typologically unusual,
we show that it is the outcome of processes of cyclical change that are well known with respect to negation: the notion of ‘not
yet’ came to be expressed by a construction in which an originally pre-predicative ‘still’ marker also occupies a post-predicate
position. Erosion of the initial element of this construction then left the post-predicate ‘still’ marker as the sole exponent of
‘not yet’. Analogy with embracing constructions for standard negation and structural calquing across languages in the group can be
seen to have led to the innovative patterns for expressing ‘not yet’ being shared across languages.
Keywords: negation, phasal polarity, cyclicity, Timor-Alor-Pantar
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Typological preliminaries
- 2.1Phasal polarity
- 2.2Negation reinforcement and cyclical change
- 3.The Alor-Pantar languages
- 4.Negation in the Alor-Pantar languages
- 5.Phasal polarity in Alor-Pantar languages
- 5.1‘Already’ and ‘still’
- 5.2‘No longer’ and ‘not yet’
- 5.3Summary
- 6.Development of position-dependent polarity markers in Alor-Pantar
- 7.Concluding discussion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Abbreviations
- Author queries
-
References
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