A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval Rajasthani

The PRO coindexation of converbs and participles in South Asian Languages along with Subject Identity Constraint (Subject Control) violation has been studied by Subbarao (2012) and Murthy (1994). I present the analysis of Medieval Rajasthani data focusing on two construction types - constructions co...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tokaj Joanna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-06-01
Series:Lingua Posnaniensis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/linpo-2016-0007
id doaj-c374fe4561024a96b3d32d0694fc741e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c374fe4561024a96b3d32d0694fc741e2021-09-06T19:20:04ZengSciendoLingua Posnaniensis2083-60902016-06-0158110512010.1515/linpo-2016-0007linpo-2016-0007A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval RajasthaniTokaj Joanna0Chair of Oriental Studies, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, PolandThe PRO coindexation of converbs and participles in South Asian Languages along with Subject Identity Constraint (Subject Control) violation has been studied by Subbarao (2012) and Murthy (1994). I present the analysis of Medieval Rajasthani data focusing on two construction types - constructions consisting of converbs and participles. I compare my findings on Rajasthani with previous analyses of the Hindi language. I demonstrate that PRO coindexation in Medieval Rajasthani is more strict than in Hindi. Participles are coindexed with a subject or a direct object of the main clause while converbs are most often subject-oriented. Subject Identity Constraint (Subject Control) violation in Medieval Rajasthani (MR) occurs in constructions consisting of participles and converbs. Subject Identity Constraint may be violated in MR in sentences denoting cause and effect and time relation.https://doi.org/10.1515/linpo-2016-0007pro coindexationparticiplesconverbsabsolute constructionshindimedieval rajasthanisubject identity constraint violationearly new indo-aryanhistorical syntaxconverbabsolute constructionclause linking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tokaj Joanna
spellingShingle Tokaj Joanna
A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval Rajasthani
Lingua Posnaniensis
pro coindexation
participles
converbs
absolute constructions
hindi
medieval rajasthani
subject identity constraint violation
early new indo-aryan
historical syntax
converb
absolute construction
clause linking
author_facet Tokaj Joanna
author_sort Tokaj Joanna
title A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval Rajasthani
title_short A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval Rajasthani
title_full A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval Rajasthani
title_fullStr A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval Rajasthani
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in Hindi and Medieval Rajasthani
title_sort comparative study of participles, converbs and absolute constructions in hindi and medieval rajasthani
publisher Sciendo
series Lingua Posnaniensis
issn 2083-6090
publishDate 2016-06-01
description The PRO coindexation of converbs and participles in South Asian Languages along with Subject Identity Constraint (Subject Control) violation has been studied by Subbarao (2012) and Murthy (1994). I present the analysis of Medieval Rajasthani data focusing on two construction types - constructions consisting of converbs and participles. I compare my findings on Rajasthani with previous analyses of the Hindi language. I demonstrate that PRO coindexation in Medieval Rajasthani is more strict than in Hindi. Participles are coindexed with a subject or a direct object of the main clause while converbs are most often subject-oriented. Subject Identity Constraint (Subject Control) violation in Medieval Rajasthani (MR) occurs in constructions consisting of participles and converbs. Subject Identity Constraint may be violated in MR in sentences denoting cause and effect and time relation.
topic pro coindexation
participles
converbs
absolute constructions
hindi
medieval rajasthani
subject identity constraint violation
early new indo-aryan
historical syntax
converb
absolute construction
clause linking
url https://doi.org/10.1515/linpo-2016-0007
work_keys_str_mv AT tokajjoanna acomparativestudyofparticiplesconverbsandabsoluteconstructionsinhindiandmedievalrajasthani
AT tokajjoanna comparativestudyofparticiplesconverbsandabsoluteconstructionsinhindiandmedievalrajasthani
_version_ 1717777438970216448