On the modal functions of Lithuanian verbs of coming

Autor: Erika Jasionytė-Mikučionienė
Jazyk: němčina
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
lcsh:Language and Literature
Modal and non-modal meanings
Linguistics and Language
History
participant-external necessity
Senieji lietuvių raštai
corpus-based analysis
Language and Linguistics
Corpus-based analysis
necessive constructions
Lietuva (Lithuania)
Participant-external necessity
lcsh:P1-1091
Išorinės reikiamybės dalyviai
verbs of coming
Senieji lietuviški raštai
Necessive constructions
modal and non-modal meanings
Old Lithuanian texts
060201 languages & linguistics
old Lithuanian texts
Latvian
Modal verb
06 humanities and the arts
Lithuanian
Nominative case
language.human_language
Linguistics
Reflexive verb
lcsh:Philology. Linguistics
Reikiamybės konstrukcijos
Genitive case
Lithuanian grammar
0602 languages and literature
language
lcsh:P
Tekstynų lingvistika
Modalinės ir nemodalinės reikšmės
Adjective
Kalbos dalys. Morfologija / Morphology
Zdroj: Kalbotyra, Vol 69 (2017)
Kalbotyra, Vilnius : Vilniaus universiteto leidykla, 2016, t. 69, p. 105-120
Kalbotyra 2016, t. 69, p. 105-120.
ISSN: 2029-8315
1392-1517
Popis: The verbs of coming and going as a means of modality have been investigated in a number of languages: Russian (Majsak 2005; Bourdin 2014), Latvian (Wälchli 1996, 2000), Estonian (Penjam 2006), Finnish (Kangasniemi 1992) and others. However, with the exception of some observations made by Wälchli (1996) or Nau (2012), the realization of modality by "come" or "go" verbs in Lithuanian has not been thoroughly examined. Thus, the present paper is concerned with a diachronic as well as synchronic variation pertaining to two Lithuanian verbs of motion that contain the root "go", i.e. "pareiti" "come home, return" and "prieiti" "approach on foot" as well as their reflexive counterparts. The article seeks to establish to what extent the verbs under analysis have developed modal meanings in Contemporary Lithuanian as well as the earliest period of the language (16th–17th centuries) and to account for the possible diachronic evolution of modal meanings. It focuses on both qualitative as well as quantitative parameters. The data have been collected from the old written Lithuanian texts (16th–17th centuries) and the corpus of the Contemporary Lithuanian Language, namely its subcorpus of fiction texts. The text sample on which the study is based shows that the modal constructions with the Lithuanian verbs of motion based on the root "go" appear in the 16th century. It is only the reflexive forms "pareitis(i)" ("PREF-go-REFL") and "prieitis(i)" ("PREF-go-REFL") that have potential to realise non-epistemic modality: the analysed material did not reveal any instances where non-reflexive forms "pareiti" and "prieiti" are used to convey modality. The predominant modal meaning of the reflexive verbs "pareitis(i)" and "prieitis(i)" concerns the meaning of participant-external as well as deontic necessity. As for Contemporary Lithuanian, the "go"-derived necessive constructions are rather marginal in the contemporary system of modality: the verbs under analysis are more common in spoken Lithuanian or dialects than in written Lithuanian. Moreover, semantic distribution among the reflexive verbs under consideration differs in Old and in Contemporary Lithuanian. Deontic necessity takes the leading position among the reflexive verb "pareitis(i)" in Old Lithuanian, whereas participant-external necessity predominates among the reflexive verb "prisieiti" in Contemporary Lithuanian.
Databáze: OpenAIRE