Abstract
Abstract
The paper sketches the state of affairs of our understanding of postverbal negation. It departs from the
typological finding that there is a cross-linguistic preference for a negator to precede the verb. Nevertheless, a sizable
proportion of the world’s languages adhere to a pattern with a negator following the verb, and such negators are typically
morphologically bound. The existence of this pattern, unfavorable from a functional perspective, calls for a diachronic
explanation. The paper takes stock of diachronic processes that can lead to postverbal negation, in general, and suffixal
negation, in particular. Furthermore, a language may acquire a pattern with postverbal negation through language contact, and this
is yet another perspective that the paper addresses. Finally, we introduce the contributions to this volume, highlighting the new
insights.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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