Estival and Myhill (1988) propose the passive construction as the (only) source for morphological ergativity, and hypothesize a unidirectional path of change which appears crucially to pass through a stage which they label deep ergative, but which has been called discourse ergative by a number of linguists working in the field of discourse analysis. This paper begins by addressing the synchronic issue of whether or not Indonesian may be considered discourse ergative. An examination of discourse determinants of voice in Indonesian shows that it cannot be considered ergative on a discourse level. However, Indonesian developed out of Early Modern Malay, which has been identified as discourse ergative (Hopper, 1979a, 1979b, 1983, 1986). This analysis of Indonesian has serious diachronic implications for Estival and Myhill's (1988) hypothesis, which must be revised either by allowing for bidirectional change, or by eliminating the discourse ergative stage.
Rajeg, I Made, Gede Primahadi Wijaya Rajeg & I Wayan Arka
2022. Corpus linguistic and experimental studies on the meaning-preserving hypothesis in Indonesian voice alternations. Linguistics Vanguard 8:1 ► pp. 367 ff.
Riesberg, Sonja, Maria Bardají i Farré, Kurt Malcher & Nikolaus P. Himmelmann
2008. Malay as a mirror of Austronesian: Voice development and voice variation. Lingua 118:10 ► pp. 1470 ff.
Postman, Whitney Anne
2004. Processing of complex sentences in a case of aphasia in Indonesian: thematic vs. linear strategies. Journal of Neurolinguistics 17:6 ► pp. 455 ff.
Postman, Whitney Anne
2011. Some critical concerns for adapting the Bilingual Aphasia Test to Bahasa Indonesia. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 25:6-7 ► pp. 619 ff.
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