Journal article

Corpus Linguistic and Experimental Studies on the Meaning-Preserving Hypothesis in Indonesian Voice Alternations

I MADE RAJEG Gede Primahadi Wijaya Rajeg I WAYAN ARKA

Volume : 8 Nomor : 1 Published : 2022, January

Linguistics Vanguard A Multimodal Journal for the Language Sciences

Abstrak

One essential feature of voice alternation is that active and passive clauses centred around a given verb express the same meaning: the “meaning-preserving” hypothesis. One effect of the alternation is the different linking of grammatical relations and semantic roles, which affects the identity of the subject. This paper investigates the meaning-preserving hypothesis in voice alternation in Indonesian from a quantitative usage-based perspective by combining corpus-based data with sentence-production experiment data. It analysed Indonesian CAUSED FORWARD/BACKWARD MOTION verbs and the distribution of their (non-)metaphoric senses in active and passive. The findings demonstrate the frequency effects and sense-sensitivity of voice alternation, such that a given voice type of a verb is strongly associated with certain senses. This finding provides initial support for a previous study on voice alternation in an Austronesian language, predicting that the verb’s semantic properties may condition the statistical bias of the verb towards a particular voice. Some convergence between experimental and corpus findings indicates that participants demonstrate some representation of the strong association between a given voice form of the verb and the sense predominantly expressed in that form, highlighting the notion of item-specific representations of linguistic knowledge as found in construction grammar. Keywords: construction grammar; Indonesian; metaphor; quantitative corpus linguistics; voice alternation