Open Access
Defining Unaccusatives in Sudanese Arabic
Author(s) -
Mohammed Taha,
Fazal Mohamed Mohamed Sultan
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
southeastern philippines journal research and development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2718-9201
DOI - 10.53899/spjrd.v27i1.172
Subject(s) - locative case , linguistics , argument (complex analysis) , syntax , computer science , typology , contrastive analysis , sociology , philosophy , biochemistry , chemistry , anthropology
This article explores the properties of unaccusatives in spoken Sudanese Arabic within the minimalist program. The overall aim is to testify the Unaccusative Hypothesis, in particular, the thematic and argument structure, locative inversion, there-insertion and passivization against the data from Sudanese Arabic. Grammatical judgment questionnaires were given to 10 native Sudanese speakers to test their intuition about unaccusatives. Parallel to the available literature, unaccusatives in Sudanese Arabic are defined by their semantic properties reflected syntactically in their thematic and argument structure. Unaccusatives can appear in locative inversion construction and in thereinsertion structures but cannot undergo passivization. This class of predicates takes a single argument, assigning the thematic role as Theme. Structurally, the single argument of unaccusative verbs moves from its canonical object position within VP to non-canonical surface subject position in [Spec, TP], making the structural derivation of unaccusative similar to that of passives, in that both lack external argument as well as both involve argument raising from lower position to higher position. The findings of this study manifest that languages of the world share some common properties even though they belong to different families. This in turn, provides rich information to comparative syntax, linguistic theories, and language typology.