Abstract
The study explores a range of transitive constructions of varying prototypicality in Modern Hebrew (MH) referring to causal and non-causal events, including complex predicates, semi-transitive and lexicalized constructions, with transitivity analyzed as a morpho-syntactic category rather than a semantic concept. The chapter describes various types of alternations and variations in case-frame and argument structure in MH transitive constructions, noting the growing tendency towards labile alternation (ambitransitivity), particularly in the prototypical causative morphological pattern of the hif 'il verb-template (e.g., hilbin 'whiten' serves both as causative 'make white' and inchoative 'become white'). In such cases, a change in the valence-frame of the verb does not necessarily involve change in the verb-morphology, yielding the claim that transitivity in MH does not depend exclusively on the semantic frame or morpho-phonological nature of the verb-pattern, but instead on the overall syntactic properties of the construction, which in turn is dependent on discourse requirements. Avoidance in discourse of the core O (object) argument is shown to occur even in highly transitive constructions, in which reader-hearers resolve the unrealized argument by context-based inferences and/or based on their communicative competence in conversational discourse.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Usage-Based Studies in Modern Hebrew Background, Morpho-lexicon, and Syntax |
Editors | Ruth A. Berman |
Publisher | John Benjamins Publishing Company |
Pages | 465-506 |
Number of pages | 42 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9789027262066 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2020 |
Publication series
Name | Studies in Language Companion Series |
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Volume | 210 |
ISSN (Print) | 0165-7763 |
Bibliographical note
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