
This paper examines the cross-linguistic phenomenon of locative case restricted to a closed class of items (L-nouns). Starting with Latin, I suggest that the restriction is semantic in nature: L-nouns denote in the spatial domain and hence can be used as locatives without further material. I show how the independently motivated hypothesis that directional PPs consist of two layers, Path and Place, explains the directional uses of L-nouns and the cases that are assigned then, and locate the source of the locative case itself in p0, for which I then provide a clear semantic contribution: a type-shift from the domain of loci to the object domain. I then examine cross-linguistic restrictions on the use of locative case and show that the patterns observed can be accounted for on the same assumptions.
Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung, Vol 23 No 2 (2019): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 23
spatial, directional, case-assignment, PP structure, [SHS.LANGUE] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics, locative
spatial, directional, case-assignment, PP structure, [SHS.LANGUE] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics, locative
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