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Vocative: a definition
Michael Daniel,Moscow State University
ALT VII,Paris, 2007
Introductory
Thanks to EVA MPI for supporting my research
Why there is a need for a definition
• Traditional grammar considers vocative trivial
~ nominal form used as address / in addressing people
• Often, the definition is redirected to the category of address, which itself remains undefined
Attempts
Daniel, Spencer to appear:
‘the vocative is a dedicated nominal form used for calling out, attracting or sustaining the addressee’s attention; it names the addressee explicitly, by using a noun referring to him or she’
Extending the definition formally
Not only nominal markers, but also: adnominal markers, such as bound adnominal particles (cf. Celtic preposed a, preposed or postposed clitics in
Daghestanian); imaginable vocative NP patterns (to which the Italian non-
productive inverse order figlio mio is close).
This definition is still inadequate, in a different way.
Not a semantic category
Vocative is used to attract the addressee’s attention.
But it does not mean ‘I want to talk to you’ or ‘I want you to listen to me’
Obvious Analogy…
Imperatives are used to cause the addressee’s doing something.
But they do not mean simply ‘I want you to do something’
Illocutionary forceSpeaker says ‘I want you to carry out P’,
and by saying so he causes the addressee to carry out his wish
Illocutionary approach
By uttering a form of address, the speaker causes the addressee to listen to him.
(rough definition)
Behavorial properties
• addresses do not have truth value
(just as imperatives, or interjections)
Behaviorial properties
• addresses seem to be hard to be reported indirectly
(again, just as, and may be even more than, imperatives)In Agul, imperatives seem to be reportable in indirect or semidirect speech - but not vocatives (Merdanova 2006)
Mangarayi: (Merlan 1982: 77)“The final syllable increases and then falls sharply in loudness and pitch”
Vajda on Ket (2004: 22)
“Nouns in the vocative represent a special type of intonation phrase in which a dynamic stress appears on the vocative ending and all the lexical tones are elided.”
Indonesian (Gil, p.c.; a pattern specific to a dialect)sharp change of pitch on the last syllable
Non-phonological prosodyTone
Vowel length
Archi (Kibrik et al 1977)
Consonant final names change the last vowel to o of any duration
Pat’imat > Pat’imoo…ootElsewhere in the dictionary, vowel length is sometimes phonological (phonetically impredictable), but only peripherally. In lexicon – expressive.
Truncation is loss of material definable in phonotactic or morphonological but not exclusively morphological terms. Truncation cuts across morphemes. Widespread in vocatives, apprently much more than in any other grammatical category.
Truncation
Khrakovski&Volodin 1986 and Goussev 2005 claim truncation for imperatives, but this seems much more limited.
• Nivkh (Panfilov 1962) – for kinship terms and personal names – drop the final consonant; lengthen the vowel and / or open it
at’ik ‘younger brother’ at’i[k] Voc at’ā; T’inyk <fem personal name> T’iny[k] Voc T’inē
• Georgian (Vogt 1971) – special vocatives in –i are claimed to be derived from vocative/hypocoristic forms in –ilo by dropping the last syllable
dedi from [ded-i]l-o ‘mother’; mami from [mam-i]l-o ‘father’
Also Chuckchi (Skorik 1961), probably Yurok (isolate within Algic) (Robins 1958), Indonesian (Gil p.c., Gil 2007), Russian, other…
Truncation
Phonological suprasegmental
s
Truncation
Suffixes
Free Particles
Sentential prosody
Case
Bound Particles
Prefixes
Lexicon
Word-level non-
phonological suprasegmental
s
borr
ow
ing
Intjct
Exclamatives
Morphosyntactic autonomy
Potentially, a complete utterance
Rarely takes dependents
Bare stem tendency
Tends to be left unmarked
Sometimes even less marked than the nominative
Ancient Greek
’Άρτεμις ‘Artemis’ Voc ’Άρτεμι; πατήρ ‘father’ Voc πάτερ
Russian
Nom пап-а, Voc пап! Nom Саш-а, Voc Саш!
Special prosody, irreportability (may be to a lesser extent than for vocatives), some truncation – are also reported for imperatives (Khrakovski, Volodin 1986; Goussev 2005 discusses imperative truncation). Common to both categories are also tendency to use a bare stem and ability to constitute a complete utterance (Jakobson).
Vocative and Imperative
Once again:
By uttering a form of address, the speaker causes the addressee to listen to him.
(rough definition)
Vocative and Imperative
Partly because of these formal similarities, and partly for purely onthological reasons, the analogies between vocative and imperative have been drawn before.
Vocative and ImperativeJakobson in his ‘On the structure of Russian verb’: underlines similarities between vocative and imperative (bare stem tendency, capability to constitute a complete utterance on its own). He says that both share apellative function (following Buehler), as opposed to representative function.
In a way, he claims imperative is a kind of vocative (or else uses the term apellative in the sense of illocution)
Vocative and Imperative
(Khrakovski, Volodin 1986) – vocative is an inducement to listen, and thus is an instantiation of inducement in general (appeals to truncation).
Vocative and Imperative
Thus, Jakobson says imperative is a kind of vocative, or both are ‘apellatives’ (whatever that means), while Khrakovski & Volodin say that vocative is a kind of imperative.
Vocative and Imperative
What evidence do we have?
vocatives imperatives
no truth value + +
irreportability + +
isolated use + +?
extraphonological
+ -
truncation + +??
bare stem tendency
+ +
Vocative and Imperative
No truth value
Irreportability
Isolated use
Bare stem
Truncation
Illocution
Special prosodies
Vocative and Imperative
Both imperative and vocative are illocutions with special prosodies, but not with the same prosody - and thus not necessarily the same type of illocution.
Vocative Illocution
Again, roughly: by uttering a form of address, the speaker causes the addressee to listen to him.
But finer grain:
• catching addressee’s attention• sustaining addressee’s attention• requiring an answer to localize an invisible
addressee • singling the addressee out of a group of listeners• apprehensive• reproaching• invective / praise
Vocative Illocution
Core function: manipulating the addressee’s discourse behavior
• catching addressee’s attention• sustaining addressee’s attention• requiring an answer to localize an invisible
addressee • singling the addressee out of a group of listeners• apprehensive• reproaching• invective / appraisal
cor
eexte
nsi
on
Georgian: an illustration of extended use
še oxer-o! you.VOC rascal-VOC‘You rascal!’
tkve briq’v-eb-o!you.PL.VOCboor-PL-VOC!‘You boors!’
Vocative Illocution
Main distinctions:
Short distance vs. long distance vocatives
Short distance may correlate with discourse integratedness
Long distance may correlate with addressee’s invisibility
Wappo (Raudin 1929); Walapai (Watahomigie et al. 2001); Ket (Vajda 2004)
Invisibility Vocatives
Visibile vocative
Vs. Invisibile vocative
Hey you, here!
Hey, where(ever) you are
Vocative Illocution
Core vocative illocution: manipulating the addressee’s discourse behavior
Core imperative illocution: manipulating the addressee’s behavior in general (~physical behavior, actions in general)
as opposed to:
The
End