Abstract
Abstract
This paper describes an exploratory approach to two related aspectual phenomena, non-culminating accomplishments
and non-culminating construals of implied-result verbs, in the Bantu languages Xhosa and Nyakyusa. While documented for a diverse
array of languages, leading to the identification of some cross-linguistic commonalities and axes of variation, these phenomena
have so far not been studied for any continental African language. Both Xhosa and Nyakyusa license non-culminating accomplishments
but differ regarding the felicity of such construals with different sub-types of accomplishments in relation to event progress, a
decisive factor being that Nyakyusa possesses verbal partitive morphology. Concerning the non-culmination of implied-result verbs,
both languages show such readings and support prior cross-linguistic findings that zero change readings are more readily available
with agentive subjects. The data further point to the potential role of causative morphology as a parameter of variation to be
considered in further comparative research on these verbs.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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