Some reflections on the classification of Polish verbs
Slawomir Zdziebko
May 2018
 

In Polish a single category-less root may be found in two or more verbs which belong to different verbal classes. This observation suggests that the established approach to deriving the exponents of verbal classes in Polish, i.e. Czaykowska-Higgins (1998), was on the wrong track in assuming that the identity of thematic vowels is dependent on the specification of the root. This paper discusses several types of root ambiguity and puts forward an alternative account in which it is the specification of the category-defining V-heads as well as the aspectual characteristics and argument structure that drive the exponence of Polish verbs. It is also postulated that the traditional account which assumes the existence of 8 verbal classes may be replaced with an approach which postulates the existence of 5 classes. I show that not only does such an approach capture certain affinities between Polish verbal classes, but also predicts which verb (sub)classes will never share one and the same root.
Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/004027
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in: submitted
keywords: theme vowels, verbs, roots, distributed morphology, polish, morphology, syntax, phonology
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