Publication: The “recipient passive” in West Slavic: A calque from German and its grammaticalization
The “recipient passive” in West Slavic: A calque from German and its grammaticalization
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Giger, M. (2012). The “recipient passive” in West Slavic: A calque from German and its grammaticalization. In B. Wiemer, B. Wälchli, & B. Hansen (Eds.), Grammatical replication and borrowability in language contact (No. 242; Issue 242, pp. 559–588). De Gruyter.
Abstract
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Abstract
Among the European languages with a participial passive, there are some that tend to distinguish dynamic passive and object resultative through the use of different auxiliaries, e.g. English, Italian or German. In German, the difference is obligatory, and the German difference between the werden-passive and the sein-resultative had an influence on several neighboring languages (Polish, Sorbian, Swiss Retoromansh, Hungarian). Only partly compatible with this area, there is another subareal in which a recipient passive is built by using
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Citations
Giger, M. (2012). The “recipient passive” in West Slavic: A calque from German and its grammaticalization. In B. Wiemer, B. Wälchli, & B. Hansen (Eds.), Grammatical replication and borrowability in language contact (No. 242; Issue 242, pp. 559–588). De Gruyter.