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Semantic Motivations for Aspectual Clusters of Russian verbs

Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008. Main Ideas. Meaning of verb motivates aspectual behaviorConceptualization of different types of events and relationship to timeComponents of verb meaning correlate with selection of Perfectives. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008. Theoretical Framework. Cluster model, four

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Semantic Motivations for Aspectual Clusters of Russian verbs

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    1. Semantic Motivations for Aspectual Clusters of Russian verbs Laura A. Janda University of Troms laura.janda@hum.uit.no hum.uit.no/lajanda

    2. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Main Ideas Meaning of verb motivates aspectual behavior Conceptualization of different types of events and relationship to time Components of verb meaning correlate with selection of Perfectives

    3. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Theoretical Framework Cluster model, four types of Perfectives Metaphors motivate Perfectives Cluster structure: 0-4 types of Perfectives Cluster structure largely predictable from the meanings of verbs Motion verbs are prototypical

    4. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Overview Cluster model Types of Perfectives Implicational hierarchy Metaphorical motivation of Perfectives Travel vs. motion and Completability Granular vs. fluid and Singularizability Conclusions

    5. Part 1 What is the structure of the aspect system?

    6. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Problem: Model of aspectual pairs has a long tradition: Vinogradov 1938, axmatov 1941, Bondarko 1983, Certkova 1996, Zaliznjak & melev 2000, Timberlake 2004 Suspicions that aspectual relationships involve more complex clusters have arisen: Isacenko 1960, Bertinetto & Delfitto 2000, Tatevosov 2002, Janda forthcoming

    7. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 What is an aspectual cluster? An aspectual cluster is a group of verbs joined via transitive relationships on the basis of aspectual derivational morphology All verbs in a cluster are aspectually related to a single lexical item In addition to Imperfective Activity verbs, an aspectual cluster can include four types of Perfective verbs: Natural Perfective, Specialized Perfective, Complex Act, Single Act

    8. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Four types of Perfectives: Natural Perfective: ????????p write, ???????p tie, ?(?)??????p pinch/pluck, ?????????p get stronger Specialized Perfective: ??????????p rewrite, ?????????p untie, ????????????p revise, ?????p blow in, ????????p pluck out Complex Act Perfective: ????????p write a while, ??????????p work a while, ??????p blow a while, ????????p pinch/pluck a while, ??????????p squeak a while Single Act Perfective: ??????p blow once, ???????p pinch/pluck once, ?????????p squeak once

    9. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Cluster components: Five items (Imperfective Activity + four types of Perfectives) can compose 31 different combinations, but only 12 cluster types are attested The three metaphors motivate an Implicational Hierarchy that constrains the structure of aspectual clusters

    10. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 The Implicational Hierarchy: There is a single Implicational Hierarchy that predicts all and only the aspectual clusters that exist in Russian. This result is based on empirical study of two multiply stratified samples of over 350 verb clusters (several thousand verbs).

    11. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 The Implicational Hierarchy: Activity ??????i pinch/pluck > (Natural/Specialized Perfective) ?(?)??????p pinch/pluck/????????p pluck out > Complex Act Perfective ????????p pinch/pluck a while > Single Act Perfective ???????p pinch/pluck once

    12. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Cluster Structures Activity Activity + Natural Perfective Activity + Specialized Perfective Activity + Natural Perfective + Specialized Perfective To any of the above one can add either: + Complex Act Perfective + Complex Act Perfective + Single Act Perfective Total: 12 extant cluster types

    13. Part 2 Why does the aspect system have this structure?

    14. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Metaphors and types of perfectives: Three metaphors govern the Russian aspectual system These metaphors motivate the derivation of four different types of Perfective verbs

    15. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 The three metaphors Solid vs. Substance => Perfective vs. Imperfective Travel vs. Motion => Construal of Completability Granular vs. Fluid => Construal of Singularizability

    16. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Travel vs. Motion One can travel to a destination or One can move without a destination This distinction is grammaticalized in Russian motion verbs: ????i walk (somewhere) vs. ??????i walk (around, back and forth) This can be likened to the Completability of an action

    17. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Completability: ???????? ?????i ?????. The writer is writing a book. ????????? ????????i ? ????????????. The professor is working at the university.

    18. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Completability: Many verbs are Ambiguous: Completable ???????? ?????i ????? A writer is writing a book Non-Completable ???????? ?????i ????? A writer writes books Some verbs are Non-Completable: ???????i moan But some can be Completable if specialized ????????i work > ????????????p revise Few verbs are unambiguously Completable: ????????i > ?????????p get stronger

    19. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 What Completability means for aspectual derivation: Only verbs that can be construed as Completable have Natural Perfectives ??????i write > ????????p write, ????????i get stronger > ?????????p get stronger Only verbs that can be construed as Non-Completable have Complex Act Perfectives ??????i write> ????????p write a while, ???????i moan> ?????????p moan a while, ????????i work> ??????????p work a while Verbs that can be Completable if specialized have Specialized Perfectives ??????i write> ??????????p rewrite, ????????i work > ????????????p revise

    20. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Granular vs. Fluid: Substances can be: Particulate, like sand Continuous, like water

    21. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Singularizability: ??????? ???i ?? ?????????. The boy was blowing on the dandelion. ??????? ?????p ?? ?????????. The boy blew once on the dandelion. ????????? ???????i ? ????????????. The professor was working at the university.

    22. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 What Singularizability means for aspectual derivation: Only verbs that can be construed as Non-Completable and have a Complex Act Perfective can also have a Single Act Perfective: ??????i pinch/pluck + ????????p pinch/pluck a while > ???????p pinch/pluck once ????i blow + ??????p blow a while > ??????p blow once ????????i squeak + ??????????p squeak a while > ?????????p squeak once ????????i work + ??????????p work a while > *?????????p work once [NB: Some are formed ad-hoc]

    23. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Singularizability and motion verbs: The Non-Completable motion verbs can also be construed as Singularizable ??????i walk can refer to multiple round-trips, in which case there is a Single Act Perfective ???????p make a single round trip

    24. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Conclusions: The cluster model is more accurate than the pair model Cluster structures are highly constrained and transparently motivated by meanings of verbs: Verbs with Completable construals form Natural Perfectives Verbs with Non-Completable construals form Complex Act Perfectives Verbs with Granular construals form Single Act Perfectives Motion verbs play a prototypical role in the system

    25. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Bibliography Avilova, N. S. 1968. Dvuvidovye glagoly s zaimstvovannoi osnovoi v russkom literaturnom jazyke novogo vremeni, Voprosy iazykoznaniia: 6678. Bertinetto, Pier Marco, and Denis Delfitto. 2000. Aspect vs. Actionality: Why They Should Be Kept Apart, Tense and Aspect in the Languages of Europe, ed. sten Dahl, 189225, Berlin. Bondarko, Aleksandr V. 1983. Principy funkcionalnoi grammatiki i voprosy aspektologii. Leningrad. Chertkova, Marina Iu. 1996. Grammaticheskaia kategoriia vida vsovremennom russkom iazyke. Moscow. Dahl, sten. 1985. Tense and Aspect Systems. Oxford. Galton, Herbert. 1976. The Main Functions of the Slavic Verbal Aspect. Skopje. Gladney, Frank Y. 1982. Biaspectual Verbs and the Syntax of Aspect in Russian, Slavic and East European Journal 26: 202215. Haspelmath, Martin. 1997. From Space to Time: Temporal Adverbials in the Worlds Languages. Munich. Isachenko, A. V. 1960. Grammaticheskii stroi russkogo iazyka vsopostavlenii sslovatskim Chast vtoraia: morfologiia. Bratislava. Janda, Laura A. 1995. Unpacking Markedness, Linguistics in the Redwoods: The Expansion of a New Paradigm in Linguistics, ed. Eugene Casad, 207233. Berlin. . 2000a. Cognitive Linguistics, http://www.indiana.edu/~slavconf/SLING2K. . 2000b. A Cognitive Model of the Russian Accusative Case, Trudy mezhdunarodnoi konferencii Kognitivnoe modelirovanie 4, ed. R. K. Potapova, V. D. Solovev and V. N. Poliakov, 2043. Moscow. . 2002a. Smantika pdu v cetine, Setkn scetinou, ed. Alena Krausov, Markta Slezkov, and Zdenka Svobodov, 2935. Prague. . 2002b. The Case for Competing Conceptual Systems, Cognitive Linguistics Today. Studies in Language 6, ed. Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk and Kamila Turewicz, 355374. Frankfurt. . 2002c. Concepts of Case and Time in Slavic, Glossos 3 http://www.seelrc.org/glossos/.

    26. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Bibliography . 2002d. Cognitive Hot Spots in the Russian Case System, Peircean Semiotics: The State of the Art. The Peirce Seminar Papers 5, ed. Michael Shapiro, 165-188. New York. . 2002e. The Conceptualization of Events and Their Relationship to Time in Russian, Glossos 2 http://www.seelrc.org/glossos/. . 2002f. Cases in Collision, Cases in Collusion: The Semantic Space of Case in Czech and Russian, Where Ones Tongue Rules Well: A Festschrift for Charles E. Townsend, ed. Laura A. Janda, Steven Franks, and Ronald Feldstein, 4361. Columbus, Ohio. . 2003. A User-friendly Conceptualization of Aspect, Slavic and East European Journal 47: 251281. . 2004a. Border Zones in the Russian Case System, Sokrovennye smysly, ed. Iu. D. Apresian, 378398. Moscow. . 2004b. A Metaphor in Search of a Source Domain: The Categories of Slavic Aspect, Cognitive Linguistics 15: 471527. . 2006. A Metaphor for Aspect in Slavic, Henrik Birnbaum in Memoriam. International Journal of Slavic Linguistics and Poetics 4445: 24960. . Forthcoming a. Aspectual Clusters of Russian Verbs, Studies in Language. . Forthcoming b. Totally Normal Chaos: The Aspectual Behavior of Russian Motion Verbs, Harvard Ukrainian Studies. . Forthcoming c. What Makes Russian Bi-aspectual Verbs Special, Slavic Contributions to Cognitive Linguistics. Cognitive Linguistics Research, ed. Dagmar Divjak and Agata Kochanska. Berlin/New York. Janda, Laura A., and Steven J. Clancy. 2002. The Case Book for Russian. Bloomington, IN. . 2006. The Case Book for Czech. Bloomington, IN.

    27. Laura A. Janda Ohrid 2008 Bibliography Janda, Laura A., and John Korba. In print. Beyond the Pair: Aspectual Derivation for Learners of Russian. Jszay, Lzl. 1999. Vidovye korreliaty pri dvuvidovykh glagolakh, Studia Russica 17: 169177. Lakoff, George. 1987. Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things. Chicago. Lakoff, George, and Mark Johnson. 1980. Metaphors We Live by. Chicago. . 1999. Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought. New York. Muchnik, I. P. 1966. Razvitie sistemy dvuvidovyx glagolov v sovremennom russkom jazyke, Voprosy iazykoznaniia: 6175. Smith, Carlota S. 1991. The Parameter of Aspect. Dordrecht. Shakhmatov, A. A. 1941. Sintaksis russkogo jayzka. Leningrad. Tatevosov, Sergej. 2002. The Parameter of Actionality, Linguistic Typology 6: 317401. Timberlake, Alan. 2004. A Reference Grammar of Russian. Cambridge. Vendler, Zeno. 1957. Verbs and times, The Philosophical Review 66: 143160. Vinogradov, V. V. 1938. Sovremennyi russkii iazyk. Grammaticheskoe uchenie o slove. Moscow. Wheeler, Marcus. 1972/1992. The Oxford Russian-English Dictionary, 2nd edition. Oxford. Zalizniak, Anna A. and Aleksei D. Shmelev. 2000. Vvedenie vrusskuiu aspektologiiu. Moscow.

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