Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2016, Side 50

Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2016, Side 50
On the other hand, such a semantic difference is absent when there is a change in the case of the NP, i.e. a change from oblique to nominative case (Nominative Substitution) or from nominative to oblique case (Impersonalization). Syntactic tests can be used to show that, in Modern Icelandic, NPs with weather verbs are subjects, irrespective of whether they are in nominative or oblique case. It is more diffi- cult to establish the subject properties of the relevant NPs in Old Icelandic, although noth - ing contradicts such an analysis. Finally, it can be mentioned that even when weather verbs occur on their own there are indications that they take a covert argument (quasi subject). This is apparent in certain types of infinitive clauses and in second conjuncts in which a covert subject is assumed to occur in conjunction reduction. A comparison of weather verbs in Modern and Old Icelandic reveals a great deal of stability in the course of time. In all periods of the language the verbs can occur either single or with an NP. The clausal position of the finite verb is constant, being restricted to second position in the neutral word order. The main difference between the two language stages is the use in Modern Icelandic of the expletive það (EXPL) and the quasi subject hann (QS), shown in (iv) and (v) respectively. (iv) a. Það rignir í dag. EXPL rains today ‘It rains today.’ b. Í dag rignir (*það). today rains EXPL ‘Today it rains.’ The expletive (which we analyze as a filler or a placeholder) emerges in the 16th century and is an instantiation of a more general syntactic change. The quasi subject hann, by con- trast, is almost exclusively confined to weather expressions (hence often labeled weather- hann). It has a parallel in other Nordic languages and first shows up in Icelandic in the 18th century. Weather-hann is different from the expletive in so far as it can either precede or follow the finite verb, whereas the expletive can only occur clause-initially preceding a finite verb. In the past few decades a tendency has been observed whereby the expletive appears after a finite verb. Such usage is far from being widespread as yet, but may suggest that the expletive is beginning to turn into a quasi subject. Sigríður Sæunn Sigurðardóttir Department of Linguistics Ghent University B-9000 Gent Sigridur.Sigurdardottir@UGent.be Sigríður Sæunn Sigurðardóttir og Þórhallur Eyþórsson50 Þórhallur Eyþórsson Deild erlendra tungumála, bókmennta og málvísinda Háskóla Íslands Nýja-Garði IS-101 Reykjavík tolli@hi.is (v) a. Hann rignir í dag. QS rains today ‘It is raining today.’ b. Í dag rignir hann. today rains QS ‘Today it is raining.’
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