Previous studies of various sign languages have identified several classes of verbs which differ from each other on the basis of which agreement affixes can be attached to them. This paper focuses on one group of verbs, which inflect for person and number (i.e. agreement verbs, using Padden’s 1990 terminology). The paper is concerned with the question of whether the agreement affixes that attach to agreement verbs correspond to the syntactic notions of subject and object, or to the thematic notions of source and goal. It is suggested that this question can be answered only by focusing on a subset of agreement verbs, namely backwards verbs. By comparing backwards verbs to regular agreement verbs, from the points of view of their morphological, syntactic and thematic behavior, the precise nature of the agreement system is revealed: agreement verbs are morphologically marked for both syntactic and thematic agreement. This is achieved by utilizing two different phonological elements available in the language: the direction of the path movement, and the facing (as distinct from orientation) of the hands. This analysis differs from previous treatments, which have disregarded facing as an independent marking device, and have therefore failed to account fully for the facts. It is argued that only an analysis which draws a distinction between these two mechanisms is descriptively adequate and explanatory.
2021. Connecting Language Acquisition and Language Evolution. In Minnesota Symposia on Child Psychology, ► pp. 57 ff.
Stamp, Rose & Wendy Sandler
2021. The emergence of referential shift devices in three young sign languages. Lingua 257 ► pp. 103070 ff.
Bross, Fabian
2020. Object marking in German Sign Language (<i>Deutsche Gebärdensprache</i>): Differential object marking and object shift in the visual modality. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 5:1
Bross, Fabian
2022. Tutorial: Sign Language Linguistics. In Language, Logic, and Computation [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 13206], ► pp. 26 ff.
2018. Agreement or no agreement. ERP correlates of verb agreement violation in German Sign Language. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 33:9 ► pp. 1107 ff.
Hou, Lynn & Richard P. Meier
2018. The morphology of first-person object forms of directional verbs in ASL. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 3:1
OZSOY, A. Sumru, Meltem KELEPİR, Derya Nuhbalaoğlu & Emre Hakgüder
2018. Properties of Command Constructions in TİD. Dilbilim Araştırmaları Dergisi 29:1 ► pp. 161 ff.
Bos, Heleen F.
2017. Author’s afterword. Sign Language & Linguistics 20:2 ► pp. 253 ff.
Thompson, Robin L., Karen Emmorey, Robert Kluender & Clifton Langdon
2013. The eyes don’t point: Understanding language universals through person marking in American Signed Language. Lingua 137 ► pp. 219 ff.
Steinbach, Markus
2011. What do agreement auxiliaries reveal about the grammar of sign language agreement?. Theoretical Linguistics 37:3-4
THOMPSON, ROBIN L., KAREN EMMOREY & ROBERT KLUENDER
2009. Learning to look: The acquisition of eye gaze agreement during the production of ASL verbs. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 12:4 ► pp. 393 ff.
MEIR, IRIT, CAROL A. PADDEN, MARK ARONOFF & WENDY SANDLER
2007. Body as subject. Journal of Linguistics 43:3 ► pp. 531 ff.
Thompson, Robin, Karen Emmorey & Robert Kluender
2006. The Relationship between Eye Gaze and Verb Agreement in American Sign Language: An Eye-tracking Study. Natural Language & Linguistic Theory 24:2 ► pp. 571 ff.
Aronoff, Mark, Irit Meir, Carol Padden & Wendy Sandler
2005. Morphological universals and the sign language type. In Yearbook of Morphology 2004 [Yearbook of Morphology, ], ► pp. 19 ff.
Meier, Richard P.
2002. Why different, why the same? Explaining effects and non-effects of modality upon linguistic structure in sign and speech. In Modality and Structure in Signed and Spoken Languages, ► pp. 1 ff.
Wilbur, Ronnie B.
1999. Stress in A SL: Empirical Evidence and Linguistic I ssues. Language and Speech 42:2-3 ► pp. 229 ff.
Wilbur, Ronnie B.
2012. Modality and the Structure of Language: Sign Languages Versus Signed Systems. In The Oxford Handbook of Deaf Studies, Language, and Education, Volume 1, Second Edition, ► pp. 350 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 26 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.