Nominative Third Person Personal Pronouns
- pster
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Nominative Third Person Personal Pronouns
They don't exist in Greek. Have I got that right? But why does Greek still have the nominative first and second person personal pronouns?
- Paul Derouda
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Re: Nominative Third Person Personal Pronouns
The distinction between third person personal pronouns and demostrative pronouns isn't absolute. Diachronically, the third person personal pronouns in many European languages are originally demonstrative pronouns (English, French and Spanish at least I'm sure about).
I'd be surprised if there's any language in the world without the equivalent of nominative first and second person personal pronouns. There must be a way in every language to say things like
"Who wants some cake? You?"
"I do"
I.e. although in many languages case endings often do the job, personal pronouns are needed for some emphatic uses or when explicit reference to the person in question is called for. (Little children might use person's names instead of pronouns here, but I don't think adults would do so exclusively in any language)
Of course, you wouldn't call them nominatives in an ergative system for instance.
I'd be surprised if there's any language in the world without the equivalent of nominative first and second person personal pronouns. There must be a way in every language to say things like
"Who wants some cake? You?"
"I do"
I.e. although in many languages case endings often do the job, personal pronouns are needed for some emphatic uses or when explicit reference to the person in question is called for. (Little children might use person's names instead of pronouns here, but I don't think adults would do so exclusively in any language)
Of course, you wouldn't call them nominatives in an ergative system for instance.
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Re: Nominative Third Person Personal Pronouns
Just to be precise, third person pronouns are in fact not personal but rather anaphoric. That is, they refer back to another linguistic unit. The first and second person pronouns are 'personal' in the sense that they refer to the (nominally) two direct participants in a conversation. They are also different from third person pronouns in that they do not exhibit gender distinction, and they are deictic. That is, their meaning depends on who the speaker is.
Having said that, Homeric Greek used the demonstrative forms ὁ, ἡ, τό (including the nominative) as a third person pronoun (he, she, it), and as a demonstrative pronoun (this, that), and as a relative pronoun (who, which). It is often a point of difficulty for those just beginning to study Homer. This also certainly ties in with what Paul said.
So why have nominative forms of first and second person personal pronouns? The Greek grammar books all tell us that they were used only to provide emphasis. I would say it is a natural feature of discourse structure to want to emphasize speaker versus listener or vice versa. The verb endings already indicate the category of person (as a nominative case equivalent) so the separate nominative pronoun merely reinforces the idea.
Marking a non-participant in the conversation, third person nominative markings are only in the verb endings because the referent does not represent an active role in the discourse and so has no need (desire?) of emphasis.
Cheers.
Having said that, Homeric Greek used the demonstrative forms ὁ, ἡ, τό (including the nominative) as a third person pronoun (he, she, it), and as a demonstrative pronoun (this, that), and as a relative pronoun (who, which). It is often a point of difficulty for those just beginning to study Homer. This also certainly ties in with what Paul said.
So why have nominative forms of first and second person personal pronouns? The Greek grammar books all tell us that they were used only to provide emphasis. I would say it is a natural feature of discourse structure to want to emphasize speaker versus listener or vice versa. The verb endings already indicate the category of person (as a nominative case equivalent) so the separate nominative pronoun merely reinforces the idea.
Marking a non-participant in the conversation, third person nominative markings are only in the verb endings because the referent does not represent an active role in the discourse and so has no need (desire?) of emphasis.
Cheers.