Affiliation:
1. University of Helsinki
Abstract
Abstract
This article discusses the emergence of the partitive case in the three western-most branches of the Uralic
language family, which are Saamic and Finnic in North Europe, and Mordvinic in Central Russia. The Finnic languages represent the
outer edge of development in the partitive from an earlier ablative case, which used to manifest ‘source’, a specific property of
spatial relations. In Finnic the partitive case is a multifunctional and conceptually distinct case, an inflectional category
which has developed highly specific functions in object marking, negative phrase and as a case of non-canonical subject. Traces of
this development are found in Saamic and Mordvinic as well, whereas other Uralic languages don’t share this kind of secondary
development and functional extension. The development of this particular affix consists of several stages, special bottlenecks,
enhancing functional properties and triggering the reanalysis of an inherited affix *-ta/-tä. This article focuses on the
diachrony of this particular affix with special emphasis on western Uralic.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Food Science,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
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