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Hindi
Glottocode: hind1269
Genalogical classification: Indo-European
Original alignment pattern: Nominative
Source construction: Resultative intransitive construction with a participial form and accusative alignment, with S arguments marked by the nominative case and verb agreement and A encoded as an oblique with instrumental case marking.
Developmental mechanism: The resultative construction is reanalyzed as active construction: the oblique NP becomes an A argument, the S argument becomes a P argument (1).
Resulting construction: A transitive construction with ergatively marked A and unmarked P that triggers agreement on the verb.
Type of change: Reinterpretation of argument structure
Alignment in the resulting construction: Ergative-Absolutive
Global alignment pattern following the change: TAM-based split alignment
Constraints on the distribution of the resulting alignment: The ergative pattern is restricted to the past tense.
Grammatical domains: Verbal indexation, Case marking
Symmetry: Symmetric
Type of data: Historical data
References: Dahl & Stroński 2016, Verbecke & De Cuypere 2009
Comments:
We refer to Dahl & Stroński (2016) for a thorough discussion of alternative interpretations of the status of the source construction in Old Indo-Aryan. Note also that it is not clear whether the ergative postposition =ne of Modern Indo-Aryan languages, such as Hindi in (2), is a direct continuant of the Old Indo-Aryan instrumental case marking -eṇa in (1) (see Verbecke & De Cuypere 2009).
Examples
(1) Vedic (Indo-European; Dahl & Stroński 2016:18)
hatā́ | índreṇa | paṇayaḥ | śayadhve |
kill:PPP.NOM.PL.M | Indra:INS | Pani.PPP.NOM.PL.M | lie.down:2PL.PRS.MID |
'You Panis lie down smashed by Indra’
(2) Hindi (Indo-European; Dahl & Stroński 2016:12)
laṛke-ne | kitāb | paṛhī |
boy:ERG | book(F):ABS | read:PST.PRF.F.SG |
‘The boy has read the book’