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Greek and Romance unagreement in Calabria

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Höhn, Georg FK 
Silvestri, Giuseppina  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4448-7709
Squillaci, M Olimpia 

Abstract

The term ‘unagreement’ describes configurations with an apparent person-mismatch between a typically definite plural subject and non-third person verbal agreement found in several null subject languages. Previous works have suggested that languages which have an obligatory definite article in adnominal pronoun constructions (APCs) allow unagreement (cf. standard modern Greek emeis oi glossologoi “we (the) linguists”), while languages that rule out definite articles in APCs do not allow unagreement constructions (cf. standard Italian noi (*i) linguisti). This article presents new evidence from Calabrian Greek (Greko), which corresponds to the predictions for other varieties of Greek, and two southern Italian Romance varieties (northern and southern Calabrese): these varieties exhibit Italian-type apcs but still allow unagreement, contrary to expectations. We discuss how the Romance data may be accommodated by extending a previous account of unagreement and propose that the hybrid pattern observed in the Italo-Romance varieties is a result of historical contact with local Greek varieties.

Description

Keywords

person, adnominal pronouns, language contact, Italo–Greek, Italo–Romance

Journal Title

Journal of Greek Linguistics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1566-5844
1569-9846

Volume Title

17

Publisher

Brill
Sponsorship
Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2015-283)
Georg Höhn acknowledges funding from the European Research Council Advanced Grant No. 269752 “Rethinking Comparative Syntax” for part of this research. Giuseppina Silvestri acknowledges funding from the Leverhulme-funded project “Fading voices in southern Italy: investigating language