
Contents
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26.1 Introduction 26.1 Introduction
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26.1.1 Restrictions on Source/Goal Combinations 26.1.1 Restrictions on Source/Goal Combinations
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26.1.2 Specificity to Source/Goal Combinations 26.1.2 Specificity to Source/Goal Combinations
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26.2 A Possible Morphological Account 26.2 A Possible Morphological Account
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26.3 Level of Representation 26.3 Level of Representation
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26.4 The Thematic Structure of Carrier Motion Verbs 26.4 The Thematic Structure of Carrier Motion Verbs
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26.5 Conclusion 26.5 Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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26 Constraints on Source/Goal Co-occurrence in Carrier
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Published:December 2008
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Abstract
In most languages, the source and goal of motion may be expressed in the same clause, for example, in the English sentence “I walked from home to school.” However, this is not possible in Carrier, an Athabaskan language of the Central Interior of British Columbia, whereby two clauses are required. This chapter examines a puzzling restriction on the combination of goal and source motion in Carrier verbs, and proposes a solution in terms of argument structure. It argues that the restriction on co-occurence of source and goal in Carrier verbs is not arbitrary, and instead can be attributed to a general property of the thematic structure of Carrier motion verbs. The chapter suggests that Carrier motion verbs are never neutral, but always describe motion with respect to some reference point. By default, this is a goal that morphology may further specify or change into a source, but may not add reference points.
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