Abstract
This article aims to describe and examine the antipassive construction in the Tenetehára language (Tupi-Guarani family). For this, it will be shown that the transitive verbs, on receiving the morpheme {puru-}, then exhibit the following properties of antipassive constructions: (i) they come to have an intransitive syntactic structure and (ii) the abstract Case of the internal argument is not valued by v, but by the postposition -ehe. Generally, such configurations behave essentially like intransitive sentences. Using a minimalist approach, we show that the main difference between an antipassive clause and a transitive one is that although the antipassive vP selects an external argument, its head is not able to value the abstract Case of the internal argument. For this reason, the object is dependent on the postposition -ehe for the oblique Case. Furthermore, unlike what happens in the derivation of transitive constructions, the φ-feature of the antipassive vP is lexically valued, which does not allow the agreement (nominative system) in terms of φ-feature, with its external argument. The result is that this external argument moves to the highest vP Spec position in the tree structure, whose head is instantiated by the verb {-wer} “want”, with which it establishes a relationship agreement in terms of φ-feature , triggering the second agreement paradigm (absolutive system).
Highlights
This article4 aims to describe and examine the antipassive construction in the Tenetehára language
We will show that the transitive verbs, on receiving the morpheme {puru-}, show grammatical properties that are typical of antipassive constructions
We argue in favor of the hypothesis that the antipassive vP selects an external argument, its head is not able to value the abstract Case of its internal argument
Summary
This article aims to describe and examine the antipassive construction in the Tenetehára language. We will show that the transitive verbs, on receiving the morpheme {puru-}, show grammatical properties that are typical of antipassive constructions These characteristics appear in other languages that exhibit this phenomenon, as shown by the examples below6:. Following recent developments in the theory of Case, the main objective of this article is to seek an explanation of how antipassive construction is syntactically derived in Tenetehára. To this end, we argue in favor of the hypothesis that the antipassive vP selects an external argument, its head is not able to value the abstract Case of its internal argument. The paper is organized in five sections, namely: in section 2, we display, according to linguistic typology, the main features of antipassive constructions in natural languages; in section 3, we show the antipassive constructions in Tenetehára looking for evidence that they may receive such a classification; in section 4, we present our theoretical proposal within a minimalist approach; section 5 concludes this paper with some final considerations
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