The syntactic construction of two non-active Voices: Passive and middle

The paper offers a theoretical characterization of the middle Voice as distinct from the passive Voice, and addresses the cross-linguistic morphological variation in realizing these two non-active Voices in different classes of languages, represented by Hebrew, Greek and English. The two non-active...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of linguistics Vol. 48; no. 1; pp. 1 - 34
Main Authors ALEXIADOU, ARTEMIS, DORON, EDIT
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Cambridge University Press 01.03.2012
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ISSN0022-2267
1469-7742
DOI10.1017/s0022226711000338

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Summary:The paper offers a theoretical characterization of the middle Voice as distinct from the passive Voice, and addresses the cross-linguistic morphological variation in realizing these two non-active Voices in different classes of languages, represented by Hebrew, Greek and English. The two non-active Voices are the morphological realization of two distinct syntactic Voice heads generating middle and passive clauses respectively. The former are cross-linguistically interpreted as (i) anticausative, (ii) reflexive (and reciprocal), (iii) dispositional middle, and (iv) medio-passive, which is distinct from passive. This variation in the interpretation of the middle Voice reflects different properties of the root rather than the application of four different lexical rules postulated by lexicalist theories.
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ISSN:0022-2267
1469-7742
DOI:10.1017/s0022226711000338