Sign order in Slovenian Sign Language locative constructions

Authors

  • Matic Pavlič Univerza v Novi Gorici

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4312/linguistica.56.1.225-238

Keywords:

locative construction, locative adposition, figure and ground, classifier predicate, Slovenian Sign Language

Abstract

In both sign and spoken languages, locative relations tend to be encoded within constructions that display the non-basic word/sign order. In addition, in such an environment, sign languages habitually use a distinct predicate type – a classifier predicate – which may independently affect the order of constituents in the sentence. In this paper, I present Slovenian Sign Language (SZJ) locative constructions, in which (i) the argument that enables spatial anchoring (“ground”) precedes both the argument that requires spatial anchoring (“figure”) and the predicate. At the same time, (ii) the relative order of the figure with respect to the predicate depends on the type of predicate employed: a non-classifier predicate precedes the figure, while a classifier predicate only comes after the figure.

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Published

28. 12. 2016

How to Cite

Pavlič, M. (2016). Sign order in Slovenian Sign Language locative constructions. Linguistica, 56(1), 225-238. https://doi.org/10.4312/linguistica.56.1.225-238