This paper examines two different strategies found in direct object encoding on the basis of a sample of 159 languages. In particular, this paper deals with the differences between symmetric (i.e. the alternation between two or more overt markers) and asymmetric (i.e. the alternation between a zero and one of more overt markers) alternations. The investigation is aimed at determining whether there are any evident cross-linguistic regularities with respect to the factors involved in these two kinds of alternation. It will be argued that the difference in the formal realization of direct object encoding is related to the distinct functions that these two structures perform cross-linguistically. While asymmetric alternations are regulated by referential properties of the direct object referent, symmetric alternations are governed by parameters related to verbal semantics, such as affectedness and boundedness, polarity, and quantification.Keywords: symmetric and asymmetric alternation, differentiated object marking, verbal aspect/ actionality, partitive case, identifiability
IntroductionAlternations in direct object (DO) encoding have been the subject of many studies in the past two decades. In particular, many studies have dealt with asymmetric (after de Hoop & Malchukov 2008) alternations in DO encoding, such as the one found in Persian, in which only definite DOs receive overt coding, while the others stay uncoded, as in (1)