Affiliation:
1. Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa
Abstract
Abstract
This paper analyzes Differential Object Marking in P’orhépecha, which involves split case and fluid case
alternations. Although this system is sensitive to Animacy and Definiteness, I will show that prominence on these scales does not
account for the distribution of flagging. In fact, in P’orhépecha, the expected prominence effects of these scales are overridden
by certain grammatical properties of the NPs, which explains the obligatory vs. forbidden flagging. The fluid pattern is of
special interest, since even though there is evidence that flagging is used as a device to codify definiteness/specificity, higher
and lower ranked objects on the definiteness scale may be (un)flagged. This peculiar behavior is explained by two facts: (a)
definite/specific descriptions may, and in some instances must, be unflagged when the context of use guarantees the intended
referential interpretation of the NP; and (b) lower ranked objects may be flagged only when their referents exhibit discourse
salience.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics
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