This volume presents the current state of the Pavia Verbs Database (PaVeDa), an open-source typological resource for the investigation of verb valency patterns and alternations from a cross-linguistic and diachronic perspective. The volume collects papers written by Italian and international early-career researchers who contribute to PaVeDa by developing datasets for new languages. Some papers in the volume discuss theoretical issues, focusing on argument structures and alternations in specific languages, while others address methodological challenges encountered during the annotation process and propose ways to overcome them. The selection of papers highlights the wide array of languages represented in PaVeDa, covering several linguistic families, including Uralic (Hungarian), Turkic (Turkish), and Indo-European languages – both modern (Hindi and Modern Standard Russian) and ancient (Vedic Sanskrit, Latin, Early Italo-Romance and the varieties of the British Isles). The volume seeks to offer an overview of the current results of the PaVeDa project and to inspire further typological and diachronic research on verb valency.
The Pavia Verbs Database. Current progress and perspectives
Lucrezia Carnesale;Martina Giuliani
2025-01-01
Abstract
This volume presents the current state of the Pavia Verbs Database (PaVeDa), an open-source typological resource for the investigation of verb valency patterns and alternations from a cross-linguistic and diachronic perspective. The volume collects papers written by Italian and international early-career researchers who contribute to PaVeDa by developing datasets for new languages. Some papers in the volume discuss theoretical issues, focusing on argument structures and alternations in specific languages, while others address methodological challenges encountered during the annotation process and propose ways to overcome them. The selection of papers highlights the wide array of languages represented in PaVeDa, covering several linguistic families, including Uralic (Hungarian), Turkic (Turkish), and Indo-European languages – both modern (Hindi and Modern Standard Russian) and ancient (Vedic Sanskrit, Latin, Early Italo-Romance and the varieties of the British Isles). The volume seeks to offer an overview of the current results of the PaVeDa project and to inspire further typological and diachronic research on verb valency.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


