
Theoretical Issues in the Languages of the Caucasus
e-Book – Ordering information
ISBN 9789027243553 | EUR 145.00 | USD 189.00
This volume presents a collection of original articles on various morphosyntactic issues in the Languages of the Caucasus with a focus on their theoretical implications. The articles not only present detailed descriptions of various structural aspects of the Languages of the Caucasus but also provide in-depth analyses with respect to the recent theoretical debates. Given that the Languages of the Caucasus present not only novel but also typologically exceptional data, the articles in the volume either offer new analyses of known linguistic puzzles or raise totally new questions based on novel data. Featuring articles on verb classes, case, ergativity, negation, evidentiality, auxiliary selection, agreement, word order, clefts, prosodic domains, and focus across Armenian, Avar, Georgian, Karachay-Balkar, Laz, Ossetic, Tsez, Tsova-Tush, West Circassian, the book serves a large audience ranging from typologists to theoretical linguists and linguists working in the domain of language contact, multilingualism, heritage linguistics, and endangered languages.
[Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, 294] Expected November 2026. vi, 395 pp. + index
Publishing status: In production
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
- IntroductionÜmit Atlamaz, Ömer Demirok and Balkız Öztürk | pp. 1–16
- Part 1. Verbal domain: Case and argument structure
- Chapter 1. The diverse argument structures of Georgian subject-experiencer predicatesLéa Nash and Martha McGinnis | pp. 18–67
- Chapter 2. Där c’ik’iw teqa retiχ ‘I want to understand everything’: Tsez verbs of perception and cognitionMasha Polinsky | pp. 68–94
- Chapter 3. Revisiting case in LazÜmit Atlamaz, Muhammet Bal and Ömer Demirok | pp. 95–117
- Chapter 4. Preference for transparency and locality in Heritage LazÖmer Eren | pp. 118–143
- Part 2. Inflectional domain
- Chapter 5. On development of the negative phrase in OsseticDavid Erschler | pp. 146–184
- Chapter 6. Evidentiality in Karachay-Balkar: Implications for the phrase structureAslı Gürer | pp. 185–211
- Chapter 7. Participles, auxiliaries and the insertion approaches to verbal periphrasisPavel Rudnev | pp. 212–236
- Chapter 8. Hyperagreement in Alashkert ArmenianMariam Asatryan | pp. 237–279
- Part 3. Clausal architecture and beyond
- Chapter 9. Within language variation in V-final projections: Objects and goals in Tush (Tsova-Tush, Batsbi)Diana Kakashvili and Stavros Skopeteas | pp. 282–311
- Chapter 10. The Georgian predicate cleft: A prolegomenonDaniel Harbour and Tamar Kalkhitashvili | pp. 312–338
- Chapter 11. West Circassian lessons on phase theoryKsenia Ershova | pp. 339–370
- Chapter 12. West Circassian scalar ‘only’ in a typology of focus markingYury Lander, Irina Bagirokova and Anna Lander | pp. 371–395