Passziválási művelet a magyarban

The article provides an analysis of the Hungarian predicative verbal adverbial construction, which may include adverbials derived from transitive as well as intransitive verbs, but there are also unacceptable cases in both types. The "transitive type" is like a passive form in that it incl...

Teljes leírás

Elmentve itt :
Bibliográfiai részletek
Szerző: Alberti Gábor
Dokumentumtípus: Cikk
Megjelent: 1996
Sorozat:Acta Universitatis Szegediensis : sectio ethnographica et linguistica = néprajz és nyelvtudomány = étnografiâ i azykoznanie = Volkskunde und Sprachwissenschaft 37
Kulcsszavak:Magyar nyelv, Magyar nyelvtan
Tárgyszavak:
Online Access:http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/3781
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520 3 |a The article provides an analysis of the Hungarian predicative verbal adverbial construction, which may include adverbials derived from transitive as well as intransitive verbs, but there are also unacceptable cases in both types. The "transitive type" is like a passive form in that it includes the original transitive verb's object marked with Nom whereas the original subject is not present. The "intransitive type", however, does not look like the result of some kind of passivization: there is no subject deletion, and the original intransitive verb has no (surface) object at all (de Groot 1995). The intransitive type does not resemble even impersonal passive constructions (e. g. in Norwegian) where the original subject is deleted. Nevertheless, the straightforward analogy of the two types and the argument structure change in the transitive type, typical of passivization, have led me to the conclusion that the two verbal adverbial types are to be assigned a single common "passivization" rule. I demonstrate that such a rule can be formulated in hierarchical thematic theories, like that of LFG (Bresnan Kanervä 1989) and Model Tau (1994). This approach, furthermore, yields a crosslinguistic theory of (normal "transitive" and extended "intransitive") passivization types, and promises the predictability of their divergent semantic properties. 
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