Abstract

Heaviness (or phrasal length) has been shown to trigger mirror-image constituent ordering preferences in head-initial and head-final languages (heavy-late vs. heavy-first). These preferences are commonly attributed to a general cognitive pressure for processing efficiency obtained by minimizing the overall head-dependents linear distance – measured as the distance between the verb and the head of its left/right-most complement (Hawkins’s Minimizing Domains) or as the sum of the distances between the verb and its complements (Dependency Length Minimization). The alternative language-specific accessibility-based production account, that considers longer constituents to be conceptually more accessible and views heavy-first as a salient-first preference, is dismissed because it implies differential sentence production in SOV and SVO languages. This paper studies the effect of phrasal length in Persian, a flexible SOV language displaying mixed head direction and differential object marking. We investigated the effect of linear distance as well as the effect of conceptual enrichment in two sentence production experiments. Our results provide clear evidence that support DLM while undermining Hawkins’s MiD. However, they also show that some length effects cannot be captured by a dependency-distance-minimizing model and the conceptual accessibility hypothesis also needs to be taken into account to explain ordering preferences in Persian. Importantly, our findings indicate that distance minimization has a less strong effect in Persian than previously shown for other SOV languages.

Highlights

  • This paper aims to contribute to our understanding of word order universals related to “grammatical weight” in OV vs. VO languages, by presenting data from Persian, an SOV language with mixed head direction

  • We have studied the effect of phrasal length on word order in Persian

  • Our data confirm a general long-before-short preference in line with other studies on SOV languages investigated so far (e.g. Basque, Korean and Japanese), contra the universal end-weight principle supported by availability-based models

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Summary

Introduction

This paper aims to contribute to our understanding of word order universals related to “grammatical weight” in OV vs. VO languages, by presenting data from Persian, an SOV language with mixed head direction. The first generalization on the matter was originally formulated by Behaghel (1909) and is known as das Gesetz der wachsenden Glieder (or Behaghel’s [fourth] law) or, in more recent terminology, as the end-weight principle. Speaking, it maintains that when ordering elements with comparable grammatical status, the longer element comes last in the sequence. The study of the role of grammatical weight (or heaviness) on the linear order of the constituents in a sentence is an important research topic in language sciences, including theoretical linguistics, psycholinguistics, as well as linguistic typology. Important early contributions to this view are two experimental works by Stallings et al (1998) and Wasow (2002), who studied the heavy NP shift in English in a series of sentence production experiments, so as to credit the hypothesis that end-weight cannot only be explained by hearer-oriented accounts

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