Erromangan Verbal Clauses
Erromangan Verbal Clauses
Erromangan Verbal Clauses
Crowley, T. (1998). An Erromangan (Sye) grammar. Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications 27: 201-204.
The basic constituent order in verbal clauses is SVO. Sentences such as the following, which
contain both nominal subjects and objects surrounded by square brackets, illustrate this pattern:
[Nompcahi] y-omol.
pig 3SG:DlSTPAST-BR:fall
'The pig fell down.'
Pronominal objects to unsuffixed verbs also enter into this kind of construction, for example:
Locational nouns generally do not occupy the syntactic slots of verbal subject or object. When
such nouns are associated with the semantic roles expressed by subjects or objects, they are generally -
though not obligatorily - apposed to the common generic noun nur 'place', as in:
With suffixed verbs involving pronominal patients, there is no post-verbal object phrase, as the
object is marked by means of a verbal suffix. Compare unsuffixed etipe 'appoint' above with the suffixed
verb ta- 'strike':
With pronominal subjects, the subject position is normally unoccupied, with the full load of
marking the various pronominal categories falling on the verbal prefixes. This means that a verbal clause
can consist minimally of just a verb and its accompanying subject and object affixes, for example:
Y-omol. Yi-ta-coh.
3SG:DISTPAST-BR:fall 3SG:DISTPAST-BR:strike-lPL.INCL
'It fell.' 'It struck us.'
There is a small set of ditransitive verbs with which two unmarked noun phrases can follow the
verb. The only verbs of this type are set out in Table 1, with the semantic roles of the first and second
objects as indicated. A pronominally marked object expresses the roles listed in Table 1 under the heading
for the first object. Thus:
Y-ovon-[oc] [nvag].
3SG:DISTPAST-BR:give-2SG food
'(S)he gave you the food.'
With monotransitive verbs, the recipient is expressed by the dative preposition pog-. This
preposition cannot be used with verbs belonging to the subset of ditransitive verbs. Thus, compare the
monotransitive verb tamul- 'send' in the following example:
*Yi-tamul-cam nvat.
3SG:DlSTPAST-BR:send- 1PL.EXCL money
It was pointed out that no lexical constituent can appear between a transitive verb and its object.
This restriction does not hold with ditransitive verbs, however, which do allow adverbial constituents to
appear between the verb and the first object. Thus:
The subject slot can be occupied by a free pronoun to express contrastive stress. However, an
active verb carrying third person plural subject marking can be used to express a non-specific agent, with
the subject slot being obligatorily empty. Sye, like many Oceanic languages, has no passive, and this
construction allows the expression of semantically agentless clauses. Thus, compare the examples just
given with the following:
Cucohcoh (cu-ocdh-coh).
3PL:RECPAST-BR:see-1PL.INCL
'We have been seen.'
If the independent pronoun iror 'they' occupies the subject slot, this can only be interpreted as
expressing contrastive stress with a referential subject. Thus: