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On Ditransitive Idioms: With Respect to Korean, Hebrew, and English

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Authors

Lee, Ju-Eun

Issue Date
2017-04-06
Publisher
Language Education Research Center, Seoul National University
Citation
Language Research, Vol.53 No.1, pp. 59-101
Keywords
ditransitive idiomsfixed-goal idiomsfixed-theme idiomsfull idiomsverb-sensitivityconstituency-based approach
Abstract
This paper investigates ditransitive idioms of Korean in comparison with Hebrew and English. It describes the distribution of ditransitive idioms on the basis of fixed- and open-slot dimension, following Mishani-Uval and Siloni (2016), and discusses it in relation to argument structure types, verb types, and the word order. This paper shows that the distribution of idioms is sensitive to verb classification of Rappaport Hovav and Levin (2008) (i.e. give- vs. send-type verbs) in all three languages: Fixed-Goal (Open-Theme) idioms and Full idioms (with Fixed-Goal and Fixed-Theme) occur with send-type verbs only in all three languages. Give-type verbs only occur in Fixed-Theme (Open-Goal) idioms. I propose that an analysis that incorporates the idea of verb-sensitivity in structural terms such as Hallman (2015) can account for the similarities and differences in the distribution of ditransitive idioms across the three languages. In doing so, this paper defends (i) Constituency-based approaches to idiom formation and (ii) the base-generation hypothesis for the word order permutation in Korean ditransitives.
ISSN
0254-4474
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/117593
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