Colloquium - Uli Sauerland
Friday, May 08, 2009 , 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
Added by: linguist

Title: Clauses as Complementizers:
Embedding in Teiwa
Abstract: In several language families, the verb "say" has grammaticalized into a complementizer
(Semitic, Chadic, ... ). Does this mean that embedding was not present at the beginning of this
grammaticalization sequence? I look at a living language that instantiates the beginning of the
grammaticalization sequence: Teiwa, a Neuguinean language spoken in Eastern Indonesia. The
presence of embedded clauses in Teiwa has called into question (Klamer 2008) because typically
complementation verbs are followed by another clause starting with the verb say, as in: "You
told me ; you say ; he is well." I argue that this sequence is actually one complex sentence in
Teiwa, and that "you say" acts merely as a complementizer. I conclude that the Teiwa data make it plausible that also Old-Babylonian "para-taxis" is really embedding.

Location: Humanities One, Rm 202

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