APPLICATIVE VOICE
The 'applicative voice' is a grammatical voice which promotes an oblique argument of a verb to the (core) patient argument, and indicates the oblique role within the meaning of the verb. When the applicative voice is applied to a verb, its valency may be increased by one, and intransitive verbs may be converted to transitive verbs. For example, in Yagua "He blows into it" may be expressed as ''saduu ráviimú'', where ''saduu'' is "blow" with a third person subject, and ''ráviimú'' is an oblique meaning "into an inanimate object." Expressed with an applicative it is ''saduutára'', where ''ta'' is a locative applicative and the locative oblique is no longer present. The verb indicates both the agent as before and adds a patient/object through ''ra''; the verb is thus now a transitive one. Applicative constructions are found in various languages, particularly in highly agglutinative languages, such as Bella Coola (''Nuxálk''), Ubykh, Ainu and Bemba.
A language may have multiple applicatives, each corresponding to such different roles as comitative, locative, instrumental, and benefactive. Sometimes various applicatives will be expressed by the same morpheme, such as in the Bantu language Chichewa, where the morpheme ''-ir-'' forms both instrumental and locative applicatives. Applicatives may also be the only way of expressing such roles, as in the Bantu language Kichaga, where instrumental, benefactive, malefactive, and locative are formed solely by applicatives. In other languages applicatives coexist with other methods of expressing said roles. In these languages applicatives are often used to bring a normally oblique argument into special focus, or as in Nez Percé, to keep humans as core arguments.
Applicatives have a degree of overlap with causatives, and in some languages the two are realised identically. While differing from true applicatives, a similar construction known as dative shifting occurs in other languages, including English.
★ What is Morphology?, , Mark, Aronoff, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2005, ISBN 0-631-20319-2
★ The Handbook of Morphology, , Sam, Mchombo, Blackwell Publishers Ltd, 1998, ISBN 0-631-22694-X
★ The Languages of Native North America, , Marianne, Mithun, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-521-23228-7
★ Describing Morphosyntax: A Guide for Field Linguists, , Thomas, Payne, Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-521-58805-7
A language may have multiple applicatives, each corresponding to such different roles as comitative, locative, instrumental, and benefactive. Sometimes various applicatives will be expressed by the same morpheme, such as in the Bantu language Chichewa, where the morpheme ''-ir-'' forms both instrumental and locative applicatives. Applicatives may also be the only way of expressing such roles, as in the Bantu language Kichaga, where instrumental, benefactive, malefactive, and locative are formed solely by applicatives. In other languages applicatives coexist with other methods of expressing said roles. In these languages applicatives are often used to bring a normally oblique argument into special focus, or as in Nez Percé, to keep humans as core arguments.
Applicatives have a degree of overlap with causatives, and in some languages the two are realised identically. While differing from true applicatives, a similar construction known as dative shifting occurs in other languages, including English.
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References
★ What is Morphology?, , Mark, Aronoff, Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2005, ISBN 0-631-20319-2
★ The Handbook of Morphology, , Sam, Mchombo, Blackwell Publishers Ltd, 1998, ISBN 0-631-22694-X
★ The Languages of Native North America, , Marianne, Mithun, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-521-23228-7
★ Describing Morphosyntax: A Guide for Field Linguists, , Thomas, Payne, Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-521-58805-7
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