Passivisation in Semitic, Iranian, Armenian, and Beyond
https://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/OBP.0516
Contributor(s)
Noorlander, Paul M. (0000-0002-9407-1453) (editor)
Asadpour, Hiwa (0000-0002-7074-2435) (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
This volume brings together research on passive voice constructions in low-resource languages of Western Asia, a region marked by extraordinary linguistic diversity as well as a long history of cultural suppression and marginalisation. The contributions showcase the passive voice in Semitic, Iranian, Armenian, Greek, and Turkic languages, many of which are endangered, understudied, or confined to diaspora communities and disappearing language islands. Education and cultural expression in these languages remained heavily restricted across parts of Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran, underscoring the urgent need for documentation and revitalisation.
The chapters explore the rich typological variation of passive voice constructions, examining their typological traits, synchronic microvariation and diachronic developments. Drawing on Siewierska’s definition, the studies investigate processes of agent demotion and patient promotion, reductions in transitivity, and the fuzzy boundaries between passive and other detransitivisation strategies such as middles, anticausatives, statives and light verbs as well as impersonal subjects and agent omission. They also shed light on the impact of text genre, verbal aspect, and language contact on passivisation.
By integrating theoretical, typological, historical, and areal perspectives, the volume discusses the internal stability of detransitivisation strategies, their evolution from earlier source constructions, and their position in voice systems more broadly. It raises fundamental questions about whether cross-linguistic tendencies in passives reflect universal patterns or area-specific historical contingencies.
This collection thus provides an essential resource for scholars of all theoretical persuasions that are interested in voice and valency and/or in Western Asia’s linguistic diversity, while foregrounding the pressing need to support communities whose linguistic heritage is at risk.
Keywords
Agent demotion; Detransitivisation; Diachronic development; Language contact; Passive constructions; Patient promotionDOI
10.11647/OBP.0516ISBN
9781805118268, 9781805118275, 9781805118282OCN
1568989837Publisher
Open Book PublishersPublisher website
https://www.openbookpublishers.com/Publication date and place
Cambridge, UK, 2026Imprint
Open Book PublishersSeries
Semitic Languages and Cultures, 41Classification
Middle East
Linguistics
Sociolinguistics
Historical and comparative linguistics
Grammar, syntax and morphology


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