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How exotic is Finnish?

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Title: How exotic is Finnish?


1
How exotic is Finnish?
  • Östen Dahl

2
The received view
  • Genealogically, Finnish belongs to the Uralic
    languages
  • Typologically, Uralic (and also Altaic) languages
    differ radically from Indo-European languages by
    being agglutinative rather than
    flectional/fusional

3
Testing the received view on data from WALS
  • The World Atlas of Language Structures (2005)
    contains 142 maps of the distribution of
    phonological, grammatical and lexical phenomena
    in the languages in the world

4
What the received view predicts
  • The data in WALS can be used to construct
    typological profiles and measure typological
    distances between languages
  • Finnish, Hungarian and Turkish belong to the core
    sample in WALS
  • The received view suggests that these
    agglutinative languages should form a tight
    cluster in the WALS data
  • Lets look at the 222 best represented languages
    in WALS

5
Finnish and Hungarian do not cluster
Languages typologically closest to Finnish
  • Most of the languages typologically closest to
    Finnish are in fact Indo-European
  • Turkish and Hungarian are ranked after these

Armenian (Eastern) IE 22
Polish IE 25
Latvian IE 25
Nenets Uralic 25
Bulgarian IE 26
Lithuanian IE 26
Russian IE 27
Kashmiri IE 27
Evenki Altaic 28
Brahui Dravidian 28
Turkish Altaic 29
Hungarian Uralic 29
6
Classical morphological typology
  • The languages of the world are said to all belong
    to one of four types
  • isolating
  • agglutinative
  • fusional (inflecting, flectional)
  • polysynthetic

7
Agglutinative languages (Wikipedia)
  • Agglutinative languages have words containing
    several morphemes that are always clearly
    differentiable from one other in that each
    morpheme represents only one grammatical meaning
    and the boundaries between those morphemes are
    easily demarcated that is, the bound morphemes
    are affixes, and they may be individually
    identified.
  • Agglutinative languages tend to have a high
    number of morphemes per word, and their
    morphology is highly regular.

8
Fusional languages (Wikipedia)
  • Morphemes in fusional languages are not readily
    distinguishable from the root or among
    themselves. Several grammatical bits of meaning
    may be fused into one affix.
  • Morphemes may also be expressed by internal
    phonological changes in the root (i.e.
    morphophonology), such as consonant gradation and
    vowel gradation, or by suprasegmental features
    such as stress or tone, which are of course
    inseparable from the root.

9
Which language is agglutinative?
  • Finnish
  • Nominative Illative sg Illative pl
  • vesi veteen vesiin water
  • Swedish
  • hund-ar-na-s svans-ar kupera-de-s
  • dog-PL-DEF-GEN tail-PL dock-PST-PASS
  • the dogs tails were docked

It is not so difficult to find Finnish examples
that look fusional and Swedish examples that look
agglutinative
10
Bell curve parameters
  • Typological parameters are continua rather than
    dichotomies
  • Typological distributions tend to be normal Bell
    curves rather than inverted Bell curves

11
Inflectional synthesis of the verb
4-5
2-3
8-9
6-7
12-13
10-11
0-1
Finnish does not seem to have very complex verb
morphology!
12
Number of finite forms in Finnish and French
  • Finnish
  • present
  • past
  • conditional
  • (potential)
  • French (written)
  • présent ind.
  • présent subj.
  • imparfait ind.
  • imparfait subj.
  • passé simple
  • futur
  • conditionnel

Indeed, Finnish has fewer finite verb forms than
e.g. French
13
Number of case forms (WALS)
The richness of the Finnish case system is quite
unusual typologically
4-5
no case
6-7
8-9
2
8-9
10-11
6-7
10-
5
3
4
14
Finnish as an agglutinative language
  • Seeing Finnish as a language which is
    fundamentally different from other European
    languages because of its agglutinative character
  • gives too much prominence to the
    agglutinativefusional dimension
  • is misleading since Finnish is rather far from
    the extreme end of that dimension

15
The Finnish case system
  • What is really special about Finnish (in
    particular in comparison to Germanic and Romance
    languages) is the rich case system.
  • Interestingly, even if Finnish finite verb
    morphology is relatively poor there is a complex
    set of non-finite forms which is enhanced by case
    inflections (cf. Anne Tamms paper at this
    conference)

16
Importance of areal influence
  • The typological profile of a language is often
    predicted better by its geographical location
    than by its genealogical affiliation
  • Finnish is in many respects more similar to its
    European neighbours than to more closely related
    Uralic languages

17
OV/VO vs. PostP/PreP
Continental Asia mainly OV and postpositions
Europe mainly VO and prepositions
18
Indo-European word order
The border between VO/PreP and OV/PostP cuts
straight through the IE languages
19
Uralic word order
Uralic languages are all postpositional (or
almost), but western Uralic languages are VO
rather than OV
20
Harmonic vs. disharmonic types
The disharmonic combination of VO and
postpositions is found in a buffer zone between
the harmonic options
21
The West European profile
German Europe Indo-European -133
French Europe Indo-European -125
Spanish Europe Indo-European -120
English Europe Indo-European -119
Greek (Modern) Europe Indo-European -96
Russian Europe Indo-European -68
Latvian Europe Indo-European -60
Irish Europe Indo-European -58
Finnish Europe Uralic -51
Georgian Asia Kartvelian -38
What languages in the WALS database fit best the
profile of European languages west of 20 E?
22
Features that are over-represented in western
Europe
  • Perfect from possessive
  • Interrogative word order marks polar questions
  • Negative indefinites show mixed behaviour w.r.t.
    predicate negation
  • The language has markers that can code both
    situational and epistemic modality, both for
    possibility and for necessity.
  • First and a small set of consecutive higher
    ordinal numerals are suppletive
  • Relative pronoun used for relativization on
    objects
  • Distributive numeral marked by preceding word
  • Relative pronoun used for relativization on
    subjects
  • Other action nominal construction

Boldface features are represented in Finnish
23
Distribution of some European features
24
Finnish as a European language
  • Finnish is not quite a Standard Average
    European (SAE) language
  • but comes fairly close to it

25
Euronormativity makes Finnish seem unique
  • However, in linguistics we tend to find a strong
    tendency towards euronormativity
  • SAE is taken as the normal way for languages to
    be
  • In this perspective, differences between SAE and
    Finnish become salient
  • and Finnish is exoticized and seen as unique
  • which of course may be regarded as a highly
    desirable property

26
Sometimes it is SAE that is exotic
  • An option that seems exotic in a European
    context may not at all be so globally
  • For example, pro-drop, i.e. omission of
    pronominal subjects, is not usually possible in
    SAE languages (Germanic, Romance)
  • Globally, however, pro-drop is the normal case

27
Expression of non-lexical subjects
Finnish mixed
Minority option (11) obligatory subject pronouns
Majority option (61) subject affixes on verbs
28
Everything may be equally exotic
  • Sometimes, both SAE and Finnish represent
    minority options
  • Consider predicative possession how does a
    language express I have a cow?
  • SAE a transitive verb to have
  • Finnish a locative construction minulla on NP

29
Predicative possession
In Stassens sample, have is the most common
option but still a minority one
The locational option is almost equally common
30
Is definiteness an Indo-European phenomenon?
  • Paradoxically, euronormativity sometimes leads
    researchers to see bias where there is none
  • Consider this quotation from an earlier plenary
    lecture (re definiteness in Finnish)
  • is resolutely against importing categories from
    Indo-European linguistics for describing
    languages characterised by different structures
    and pragmatics

31
Definite articles in Europe
If we look at Europe definite articles may indeed
seem like an Indo-European phenomenon
32
Definite articles globally
blue dots definite articles (237 lgs)
but in a global perspective they are definitely ?
not!
33
LOPPU
34
  • Malliesimerkkejä agglutinoivista kieliryhmistä
    ovat uralilaiset ja altailaiset kielet.
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