Published December 30, 2022 | Version v1

Proto-Bantu existential locational construction(s)

  • 1. Royal Museum for Central Africa, Tervuren
  • 2. University of Helsinki

Description

This chapter proposes a Proto-Bantu reconstruction of existential constructions
based on a convenience sample of 180 Bantu languages, which points towards
“existential locationals” (ELs) as a suitable base for comparison. ELs include
inverse-locational predications as well as expressions of generic existence. We develop a
detailed typology of ELs through a careful examination of the morphosyntactic
variation which their building blocks display across Bantu. This typology clearly
singles out two types of ELs with high frequencies and Bantu-wide distributions,
which are reconstructable to at least node 5 in the phylogenetic tree of the Bantu
family of Grollemund et al. (2015). Both display locative subject markers and
“figure inversion” in relation to plain locational constructions. The difference between
the main types lies in the selection of the copula: either a locative or a comitative
one. North-Western and Central-Western Bantu languages show few reflexes of the
suggested reconstructions. Instead, they often have non-inverted ELs which are
cross-linguistically uncommon or, less frequently, ELs involving expletive
inversion. The non-dedicated EL can be considered a retention of the original structure
or a (contact-induced) innovation. Our preference goes to the second hypothesis
assuming that a severe reduction of (locative) noun classes and ensuing (locative)
agreement triggered a more rigid word order and consequently non-inverted ELs
or inverted expletive ELs exempt of locative marking.

Files

373-BostoenEtAl-2022-14.pdf

Files (567.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:dc70a68ad4524ddcd5044c7f34714f77
567.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is part of
978-3-96110-406-2 (ISBN)
10.5281/zenodo.7560553 (DOI)