Typology of clausal negation

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    Matti Miestamo, University of Helsinki,

    A Typology of Clausal Negation: Symmetric vs. Asymmetric

    This paper presents the central results of a typological study of clausal negation (Miestamo 2003). The study

    is based on a genealogically stratified sample of 297 languages. It focuses on standard negation defined as

    the basic structural means languages have for negating declarative verbal main clauses. A typological

    classification of standard negation structures is proposed. The frequencies and areal distributions of the

    different types are discussed as well as some typological correlations. Functional motivations are proposed

    for the typological findings and some diachronic issues are also treated. This paper concentrates on the

    typological classification of negative structures illustrating it with numerous examples and also briefly

    discusses the numerical data and the functional motivations.

    The classification is based on the structural differences between affirmatives and negatives. The basic

    distinction is between symmetric and asymmetric negation. In symmetric negation affirmatives and negatives

    show no structural differences (except for the presence of the negative marker(s) of course), whereas in

    asymmetric negation there are structural differences between affirmatives and negatives, i.e. asymmetries. A

    distinction is made between constructional and paradigmatic asymmetry. Symmetric negative constructionsdo not differ structurally from the corresponding affirmative constructions (ex. 1), but asymmetric ones do

    (ex. 2,5). In symmetric paradigms all forms used in the affirmative have corresponding forms in the negative

    and no distinctions are neutralized (e.g. in German or in Italian all verbal forms can be negated), whereas in

    asymmetric paradigms the affirmative-negative correspondences are not one-to-one (ex. 3,4,5). Asymmetric

    negation can be divided into subtypes according to which domains or categories are affected by the

    asymmetry. In subtype A/Fin the finiteness of verbal elements changes typically a finite element

    (auxiliary) is added and the lexical verb loses its finiteness; in the A/Fin construction in the Nivkh examples

    (2) the negative verb acts as the finite element of the clause and the lexical verb takes a dative suffix. In

    subtype A/NonReal the negative is marked with a non-realized category such as irrealis; in Maung (3) the

    construction is symmetric but the paradigm shows A/NonReal asymmetry since the irrealis form must be

    used in the negative. In subtype A/Emph negatives contain marking that expresses emphasis in non-

    negatives; in the Meithei examples (4) the construction is symmetric but the paradigm has A/Emph

    asymmetry since the more emphatic assertive must be used in the negative. In subtype A/Cat the marking of

    grammatical categories (e.g. TAM, or person-number) is affected in other ways; in the Kolokuma Ijo

    examples (5) the negative marker replaces the TAM markers and there is both constructional and

    paradigmatic A/Cat asymmetry. Both constructional and paradigmatic asymmetry can be found in all of these

    subtypes, although paradigmatic asymmetry is marginal in A/Fin. Some of these subtypes can be divided into

    further subtypes.

    Symmetric negation is clearly the most common type found in the languages of the world. Clear

    differences in frequency are found between the subtypes of asymmetric negation, A/Cat being the most

    common and A/Emph the rarest. Symmetric negation is commonly found in all geographical areas, and thereare two areas where symmetric negation is found almost exclusively: Continental Europe and a part of

    Southeast Asia. Asymmetric negation is most commonly found in Africa, where A/Cat asymmetries are very

    common; A/Cat asymmetries are not rare elsewhere, either. A/NonReal is found to a significant extent only

    in Australia. Most of the few languages showing A/Emph asymmetry are found in Southeast Asia and

    Oceania. A/Fin is more evenly distributed. A slight correlation is found between symmetric negation,

    preposed free negators and VO constituent order on the one hand, and between asymmetric negation,

    postposed bound negators and OV order on the other.

    The concept of analogy is central to the functional motivations proposed for the classification.

    Symmetric negatives are language-internally analogous to the linguistic structure of the affirmative and thus

    motivated by pressure for cohesion in the system. Asymmetric negation is language-externally analogous to

    different asymmetries between affirmation and negation on the functional level the stativity of negation,

    the discourse context (backgroundedness) of negation, the semantic connection between negation and other

    conceptualizations of the non-realized. The different subtypes of asymmetric negation have grammaticalized

    different aspects of the functional asymmetry.

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    Data

    (1) Shipibo-Konibo (Pilar Valenzuela, p.c.)

    a. rono-ra kako-nko ka-ke

    Rono.ABS-EVD Caco-ALL go-CMPL

    Rono went to Caco.

    b. rono-ra kako-nko ka-yama-ke

    Rono.ABS-EVD Caco-ALL go-NEG-CMPLRono did not go to Caco.

    (2) Nivkh (Ekaterina Gruzdeva, p.c.)

    a. if p'ry-d' b. if p'ry-dokh k'au-d'

    he come-IND he come-DAT not.be-IND

    He comes / came. He does not / did not come.

    (3) Maung (Capell & Hinch 1970: 67)

    a. i-udba b. ni-udba-ji c. marig ni-udba-ji

    1SG.3-put 1SG.3-put-IRR.NONPST NEG 1SG.3-put-IRR.NONPST

    I put. I can put. I do not put.

    (4) Meithei (Chelliah 1997: 133, 228)

    a. tcww b. tcwwe c. cy fotostat tcwde

    tcw- tcw-e cy fotostat tcw-tc-e

    do-NONHYP do-ASS I photostat do-NEG-ASS

    (She) does. (Yes, she) has. I haven't made copies.

    (5) Kolokuma Ijo (Williamson 1965: 74)

    a. a b-mi b. a b-yemi c. a b-a

    she come-PST she come-PRES she come-NEGShe came. She is coming. She did not come / is not coming.

    Abbreviations

    1 - 1st person, 3 - 3rd person, ABS - absolutive, ALL - allative, ASS - assertive, CMPL - completive, DAT -

    dative, EVD - evidential, IND - indicative, IRR - irrealis, NEG - negative, NONHYP - nonhypothetical, NONPST

    - nonpast, PRES - present, PST - past, SG - singular

    References

    Capell, A., and H. E. Hinch. 1970. Maung Grammar. The Hague: Mouton.

    Chelliah, Shobhana Lakshmi. 1997. A Grammar of Meithei. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.

    Miestamo, Matti. 2003. Clausal Negation: A Typological Study. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Helsinki.

    Williamson, Kay. 1965. A Grammar of the Kolokuma Dialect of Ijo. Cambridge: CUP.