Weather sentences in a cross-linguistic perspective
View/ Open
Date
2024-10-24Author
Toma, Diana-Oana
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This dissertation investigates from a typological perspective the syntactic variation of
meteorological expressions in non-metaphorical contexts. The cross-linguistic research
starts from a 99 language-sample and is based on two general classes of meteorological
phenomena: dynamic, represented by precipitation and static, such as temperature and
light conditions. Meteorological expressions are considered zero-valency constructions
because no genuine semantic participant can be identified. After analysing the encoding
patterns, a new morpho-syntactic classification of these constructions is proposed,
according to the type of subject, which can be the weather phenomenon itself, a null
subject, an expletive pronoun or an abstract entity. Each of these subject types can allow
a certain range of syntactic combinations, and the verbs they combine with can vary both
semantically and in terms of valency.
Moreover, this novel classification of weather sentences according to the type of subject
allowed me to identify certain geographical and genetic consistencies, as well as some
correlations between the linguistic mechanisms employed and the type of weather event.
I observed that the encoding variation of weather phenomena has a semantic basis, and I
have shown that in the case of precipitation, which is a dynamic kind of weather
phenomena, the most common expression is a construction in which the subject is the
weather phenomenon itself and a verb of motion, since it is a phenomenon that involves
something material that can be perceived as a moving subject, whereas for temperature
and light conditions, representing a static kind of weather event, the most recurrent pattern
is a null or expletive subject and a meteo verb (the predicate is the one that carries the
meaning of the weather event) and the semantic reason lies in the fact that there are no
tangible elements that can be perceived as subjects and therefore, it is expected that the
sentence is impersonal and there is no subject.
Finally, by crossing the subject type in the two classes of phenomena, I demonstrate that
languages usually select different types of subjects for precipitation and temperature and
light conditions.