Resultative passives in Finnish

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Abstract

In this article, I argue that Finnish passive participle (e.g. avattu 'opened' and suljettu 'closed') can be multiply ambiguous: the "same" morphophonological forms exhibit different patterns of eventivity and agentivity, and are used to form "traditional" non-agreeing passives, agreeing resultative passives and agreeing sentences that describe "pure" states and behave in most contexts like "traditional" copula-adjective constructions. I show that in Finnish, Participle Phrases that look similar on the outside can be formed in different ways, and that these Participle Phrases are selected by different superordinate heads, to form either a non-agreeing passive, an agreing resultative, or a "pure" stative sentence.
Original languageFinnish
Title of host publicationApproaches to Hungarian: Papers from the 2011 Lund Conference
EditorsJohan Brandtler, Valeria Molnar, Christer Platzack
PublisherJohn Benjamins Publishing Company
Publication statusPublished - 2013

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Languages and Literature

Free keywords

  • passives
  • Finnish

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