Nino Amiridze: Georgian Reflexives in Subject Function in Special Contexts
Georgian is a language allowing reflexives to be marked by ergative.
The subject use of the Georgian reflexive phrase was first
documented with causative verbs by Asatiani (1982). The later works
such as (Amiridze and Everaert, 2000), (Amiridze, 2003), (Amiridze,
2004) discuss the use with object-experiencer verbs and transitive
verbs on non-agentive reading. The present paper offers the first
hand data on subject uses of the Georgian reflexive phrase with
transitive verbs on their agentive reading in special contexts (such
as a twin context, Madame Tussaud context, etc.) which are
problematic for the Binding Theory of Chomsky (1981) as well as for
the Reflexivity Theory of Reinhart and Reuland (1993}. The data
could be accounted for within the approach developed in (Reuland,
2001). However, the subject uses of the Georgian reciprocal
ertmanet- leave the issue of subject anaphors open.
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Maintained by Stefan Müller
Created: October 15, 2005
Last modified: March 10, 2008
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