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9 - Verb agreement in sign language morphology

from II - SHARED CROSSLINGUISTIC CHARACTERISTICS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Gaurav Mathur
Affiliation:
Gallaudet University
Christian Rathmann
Affiliation:
Universität Hamburg
Diane Brentari
Affiliation:
Purdue University, Indiana
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Summary

Introduction

Verb agreement is a topic that has received much attention in the sign language literature. Figure 9.1 shows what is often called “verb agreement” in the literature. This phenomenon has been noted in many signed languages.

The two signs, taken from American Sign Language (ASL), both describe a person asking another person. The difference lies in which of the two persons is asking the other. In the absence of prior context, the first sign means I asked someone while the second sign means someone asked me. They differ only in the orientation and direction of movement; in the first example, the hand is oriented and moves away from the signer's body, and in the other, it is oriented and moves in the opposite direction, toward the body. Such changes in the orientation and direction of movement are linked to the change in meaning described above. The phenomenon has several properties in almost all of the sign languages documented to date that make it look different from verb agreement in spoken languages.

For a working definition of agreement, the chapter follows Corbett's (2006) criteria for canonical agreement. He starts with a broad definition from Steele (1978: 610): “the term agreement commonly refers to some systematic covariance between a semantic or formal property of one element and a formal property of another.” Then, he distinguishes four necessary aspects of agreement – controller, target, domain and feature – and defines each as follows:

(1) Corbett's (2006: 4) definitions of aspects of agreement

controller: “element which determines agreement”

target: “element whose form is determined by agreement”

domain: “syntactic environment in which agreement occurs”

feature: “respect in which there is agreement”

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Sign Languages , pp. 173 - 196
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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