Adnominal possession in the languages of Wallacea: A survey

Antoinette Schapper*, Emily Gasser

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This article presents a typological survey of patterns of adnominal possession in 85 Austronesian and Papuan languages of Linguistic Wallacea, providing a more granular picture of possessive constructions in the region than previously available. The features treated are possessive word orders, locus of possessive marking, possessive classification systems, and multifunctionality of adnominal possessive markers. Unlike their relatives to the west, the Austronesian languages of Linguistic Wallacea tend to show Possessor-Possessum ordering and have an alienability distinction, often instantiated through contrastive direct and indirect constructions. In terms of broad typological features, contact with and shift from Papuan languages can be shown to have caused widespread remodeling of the adnominal possessive patterns in Austronesian languages of the area. However, their distribution and formal manifestations make clear that they are not the result of a single Papuan contact event in a single Austronesian common ancestor but must go back to multiple localized contact events across Linguistic Wallacea. Subregional patterns are often found clustered in smaller groups of languages and are the result of local processes of contact and change including morphologization and morphological loss. These become apparent when tracking changes in historically related form-function pairs in possessive constructions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)273-329
Number of pages57
JournalLanguage Typology and Universals = STUF - Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung
Volume76
Issue number3
Early online date18 Sept 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We are grateful to Laura Arnold, David Gil, and Donna Jo Napoli for their invaluable feedback on and discussion of this paper, as well as to Ceci Williamson and Martin Rakowszczyk for their help with proofreading and data wrangling, and all the speakers who took the time to share their languages with us. Schapper’s research was funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research VENI project “The evolution of the lexicon. Explorations in lexical stability, semantic shift and borrowing in a Papuan language family”, the Volkswagen Stiftung DoBeS project “Aru languages documentation”, the Australian Research Council project (ARC, DP180100893) “Waves of words”, and the European Research Council “OUTOFPAPUA” project (Grant Agreement No. 848532). Gasser’s research was funded by the National Science Foundation DDRIG 1153795, the Yale Council on Southeast Asia Studies, the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, and Swarthmore College.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.

Funding

We are grateful to Laura Arnold, David Gil, and Donna Jo Napoli for their invaluable feedback on and discussion of this paper, as well as to Ceci Williamson and Martin Rakowszczyk for their help with proofreading and data wrangling, and all the speakers who took the time to share their languages with us. Schapper’s research was funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research VENI project “The evolution of the lexicon. Explorations in lexical stability, semantic shift and borrowing in a Papuan language family”, the Volkswagen Stiftung DoBeS project “Aru languages documentation”, the Australian Research Council project (ARC, DP180100893) “Waves of words”, and the European Research Council “OUTOFPAPUA” project (Grant Agreement No. 848532). Gasser’s research was funded by the National Science Foundation DDRIG 1153795, the Yale Council on Southeast Asia Studies, the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, and Swarthmore College.

FundersFunder number
Yale Council on Southeast Asia Studies
National Science Foundation1153795
National Science Foundation
Swarthmore College
European Research Council848532
European Research Council
Australian Research CouncilDP180100893
Australian Research Council
Volkswagen Foundation
Max-Planck-Institut für Menschheitsgeschichte

    Keywords

    • adnominal possession
    • areal typology
    • Austronesian languages
    • language contact
    • Papuan languages

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