Abstract
Abstract
This paper considers language evolution from a cognitive-grammar (CG) perspective taking
Classical Arabic Case Marking (CACM) as a case in point and a departure point. It is argued that the accusative case is
diachronically the baseline case mark, designating the Objective Scene (OS) and demarcating an object of perception in the initial
stage of maximal subjectivity in which the ground (G) is totally implicit. Such maximum is then attenuated through a
process of objectification such that g entities are gradually put onstage to fulfill the functions of
identification and predication. The nominative case, then, figures to mark such emerging entities in their
baseline, immediate status. This conception of G with its functions is later extended to mark entities external to G, which gives
rise to the full, nominative-marked, baseline existential core (C∃) comprising the existential
predicate (P∃) and the existential subject (S∃). The truncation (T) of a verb’s
nominative case is argued to fulfill the semantic function of situating a process out of existential reality yielding the
existential predicate minus (P-∃), which represents a basic elaboration on baseline C∃. Processes
being extensions from perception, the accusative case attenuates to mark entities (D) that demarcate processes, implementing the
semantic function of processual modification. Finally, a genitive-marked entity (RP) is proposed to implement the
semantic function of referential modification, anchoring and referencing the conceptions of all those facets of
reality.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Language and Linguistics
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