UI Postgraduate College

URHOBO VERB PHRASE LAYER

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dc.contributor.author ALEH, Eseoghene
dc.date.accessioned 2022-02-22T14:37:04Z
dc.date.available 2022-02-22T14:37:04Z
dc.date.issued 2021-07
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1474
dc.description.abstract The verb phrase (VP) layer is the domain of clausal event and the argument structure of the verb. Extant works on Urhobo, an Edoid language, have listed lexical and phrasal categories and types of sentences in the language with little attention given to the verbs and VPs, which are germane to the understanding of Urhobo sentences. This study was, therefore, designed to investigate the Urhobo verb phrase layer, with a view to identifying the types of Urhobo verbs, their properties, and the derivation of Urhobo VPs. The split VP hypothesis of Noam Chomsky’s Minimalist Program was adopted as framework. The ethnographic design was used. Ughelli North Local Government Area, where Agbarho, the standard form of Urhobo is predominantly spoken, was purposively selected. Ten resident native speakers, one each from Uvwiamuge, Oviri, Oghara, Orhokpokpo, Ohrerhe, Ophori, Ekrerhavwe, Ikweghwu, Ughwrughelli and Okan were selected. They were selected based on their proficiency in the language. Primary data were elicited through the Ibadan 400 Wordlist and 10 structured interviews, while secondary data were gathered from existing texts in the language such as the Urhobo Bible and two Urhobo dictionaries. Data were subjected to interlinear glossing and qualitative analyses. Syntactic, semantic and morphological criteria were deployed in identifying Urhobo verbs. The syntactic criteria produced seven types of verbs: symmetrical, serial, transitive, intransitive, Inherent Complement Verbs (ICVs), causative and double object verbs. The semantic criteria yielded two types of verbs: echo and ICVs. Complex, causative and splitting verbs were the three types identified using morphological criteria. In symmetrical verbs, it is possible to swap subjects and objects without a change in meaning; serial verbs share subject and object determiner phrases (DPs); transitive verbs obligatorily take object DPs, while intransitive verbs do not. Double object verbs must take two object DPs, whereas causative verbs have a causer and a causee in a construction. Echo verbs, which are verbs that occur twice in a sentence, are also evident in Urhobo. The ICVs obligatorily select specific complements which determine their semantic interpretation. A complex verb has an obligatory internal structure that combines a verb and a noun, while a splitting verb shares object in intermediate position. In the derivation of the Urhobo verb phrase layer, the lexical verb merges with a DP to form a VP, the VP merges with a light verb to form a light verb bar (vI ), and the light verb probes its complement domain in search of DPs with matching interpretable phi features to value the unvalued features. The case feature of the DP is valued as a reflex. Thereafter, the subject DP is externally merged with vI to form light verb phrase in order to satisfy the edge feature of the light verb thus yielding the light verb phrase. The Urhobo verb types, differentiated by syntactic, semantic and morphological criteria, revealed how these verb phrases are arranged. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Urhobo verb phrase, Verb phrase layer, Edoid syntax en_US
dc.title URHOBO VERB PHRASE LAYER en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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