Zero-Derived Nouns in Greek

Author:

Alexiadou Artemis,Anagnostopoulou Elena

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate zero-derived nouns based on irregular verbs in Greek. This is an under-explored area in Greek morpho-syntax, and in this paper, we will make three main contributions. First, we will discuss the fact that the overwhelming majority of these nouns are feminine, while neuter nouns are considerably less represented and masculine nouns are almost nonexistent. As feminine is taken to be the semantically marked gender in the case of animate nouns, asserting female sex, and neuter is argued to be the default gender in Greek for inanimates, the fact that zero abstract nouns are feminine is surprising. We will argue that feminine is the default in the case of zero derivation by exploiting an analysis of flavors of n. Second, we will show that, contrary to the findings in earlier literature, certain zero-derived nouns do have argument structure, similarly to their affixed counterparts. As not all zero-derived nouns have argument structure, we will appeal to complex head formation to explain the properties of those zero-derived nouns that have an eventive interpretation but do not surface with arguments. Finally, we will turn to an examination of the size of the domain that is nominalized. Since, in our cases, we observe root allomorphy conditioned by a nominal affix in the presence of a zero verbal head, we will suggest that Pruning is the mechanism that allows this.

Funder

Deutsche Foschungsgemeinschaft

Alexander von Humboldt Research Award Winners for Renewed Research Stays Grant

German Research Foundation

Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference45 articles.

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2. Adamson, Luke, and Anagnostopoulou, Elena (2021). Interpretability and gender features in coordination: Evidence from Greek. To appear Proceedings of WCCFL, 31.

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4. Alexiadou, Artemis, Anagnostopoulou, Elena, and Schäfer, Florian (2015). External Arguments in Transitivity Alternations: A Layering Approach, Oxford University Press.

5. Alexiadou, Artemis (2001). Functional Structure in Nominals: Nominalization and Ergativity, John Benjamins.

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1. Derivational morphology in Modern Greek;Journal of Greek Linguistics;2023-11-20

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