Content deleted Content added
Table was incorrect! "If D then A, B and C" implies that "A, B, C, not-D" may be possible but "not-A, not-B, not-C, D" is not; the table had it the wrong way round |
update |
||
(9 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{no footnotes|date=July 2023}}
'''Implicational hierarchy''', in [[linguistics]], is a chain of implicational [[linguistic universal|universals]]. A set of chained universals is schematically shown as in (1):
(1) '''A
It can be reformulated in the following way: If a language has property D, then it also has properties A, B, and C; if a language has a property C, then it also has properties A and B, etc. In other words, the implicational hierarchy defines the possible combinations of properties A, B, C, and D as listed in matrix (2):
Line 26:
respectively:
(3) '''{{IPA|/
This hierarchy defines the following possible combinations of dental/alveolar, bilabial, and palatal voiced nasals in
Line 33:
(4)
{| class="wikitable"
! width="50"| ||width="30"|{{IPA|/
|-
| Type 1: || align='center'|{{IPA|/
|-
| Type 2: || align='center'|{{IPA|/
|-
| Type 3: || align='center'|{{IPA|/
|}
In other words, the hierarchy implies that there are no languages with {{IPA|/
==Morphology==
[[grammatical number|Number]] marking provides an example of implicational hierarchies in morphology.
▲[[grammatical number|Number]] marking provides an example of implicational hierarchies in morphology.<br/>
▲(5) '''Number: singular < plural < dual < trial / paucal'''<br/>
On the one hand, the hierarchy implies that no language distinguishes a trial unless having a dual, and no language has dual without a plural. On the other hand, the hierarchy provides implications for the morphological marking: if the plural is coded with a certain number of morphemes, then the dual is coded with at least as many morphemes.
==Syntax==
(5) '''Person: first < second < third'''<br/>
Line 58 ⟶ 57:
See also: [[animacy]].
==Bibliography==
* Comrie, B. (1989). ''Language universals and linguistic typology: Syntax and morphology.'' Oxford: Blackwell, 2nd edn.
* Croft, W. (1990). ''Typology and universals''. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.
* Whaley, L.J. (1997). ''Introduction to typology: The unity and diversity of language.'' Newbury Park: Sage.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Implicational Hierarchy}}
[[Category:Linguistic typology]]
|