2009
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-6497-5_8
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Non-canonical Agent Marking in Agul

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Cited by 73 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The paper proceeds along this argumentation as follows. In section 2, I show that Hungarian dative causers can be three-way ambiguous in exactly the same way as has been reported by Schäfer (2008Schäfer ( , 2012 and Ganenkov et al (2008) for the languages mentioned above. However, what is felt to be the most marked reading in other languages, often turns out to be the most easily accessible reading in Hungarian.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 69%
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“…The paper proceeds along this argumentation as follows. In section 2, I show that Hungarian dative causers can be three-way ambiguous in exactly the same way as has been reported by Schäfer (2008Schäfer ( , 2012 and Ganenkov et al (2008) for the languages mentioned above. However, what is felt to be the most marked reading in other languages, often turns out to be the most easily accessible reading in Hungarian.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…This paper aims to investigate whether Hungarian has the kind of unintended causation construction that has been reported to exist in the languages of the Balkan Sprachbund, Spanish, Italian, German, Polish, or in the East Caucasian languages (see, among others, Cuervo 2003;Ganenkov et al 2008;Kallulli 2006;2007;Rivero 2004;Schäfer 2008;2009;. The following German example from Schäfer (2008, 42) illustrates this construction:…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Albanian, Bulgarian, German, Greek, Italian, Polish, Romanian, Serbo‐Croatian, Slovenian, Spanish; cf. Cuervo 2003, Rivero 2004, Kallulli 2006, Schäfer 2008) and in many East‐Caucasian languages (Ganenkov et al 2008).…”
Section: Oblique Causersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Agul, Huppuq' dialect; elicited example) There is no differential subject marking in Agul, 25 so dative subject encoding is the only option for the verb 'see', just as ergative subject encoding is the only 25 Variation in subject encoding is only found in Agul causatives, where either the original absolutive/ergative or the locative encoding of the causee is possible (cf. Section 2.1 and Daniel et al 2012), and in the Involuntary Agent construction, where the agent is marked by the locative case rather than the ergative (Ganenkov et al 2008); neither of these marking variations, however, is relevant to experiential verbs.…”
Section: The Verb 'See' As a Possible Lexical Sourcementioning
confidence: 96%