A frame is a class of verbs that all, in a certain specific sense, have the "same" argument places, giving rise to the same grammatical behavior. There are two senses of "same", giving rise to two types of frames: semantic and serial frames.
Semantic frames
A semantic frame is a class of verbs that all have the same amount of argument places, of the same types, in the same order.
The type of an argument place says what kind of thing is allowed to go in there:
c
("concrete") means anything goes. Usually concrete arguments like "me" or "cats" or "a house", but also clauses/events whenever it makes sense in that verb.- For example, de's first slot is type
c
. One can say dẻ súq (You're beautiful) or dẻ sûaq súq (The event of your singing is beautiful).
- For example, de's first slot is type
0
means a place that must be filled with a proposition or event.1
means the place must be filled with a property.2
means the place must be filled with a binary relation.
Thus, a semantic frame can be identified with its type signature, which is just all the types of the argument places listed in a row — traditionally in parentheses.
For example: leo ("tries to") and juoq ("should") both take one concrete argument followed by one property argument. This is expressed by the type signature (c 1)
. These verbs have the same type signature, so they belong to the same semantic frame.
Furthermore, each semantic frame in Toaq has an arbitrary representative chosen for it, used as a handy way to refer to the frame. For example, the semantic frame of all verbs with type signature (c 1)
is called the LEO (semantic) frame. LEO consists of all the verbs whose argument places are just like leo's.
We say that “juoq is in the LEO frame” or “juoq is in LEO”. We also often just say that “juoq is (c 1)
”.
Table of semantic frames
TODO
Serial frames
A serial frame is a class of verbs that all exhibit the same serialization behavior.
Again, each such frame is identified by a serial signature and a representative.
But this time, the elements of the signature describe "what happens to this argument slot, when this verb is the first part of a serial verb?" rather than "what can this argument slot be filled with?"
x
orc
means that this argument place remains untouched and will still be there in the resulting serial verb.0
means that this place will be subsumed by all of the right-hand verb's arguments:- x wants 0 to be the case + x sits on x = x wants x to sit on x
1
means that this place will be subsumed by all of the right-hand verb's arguments, merging with its first one:- x tries to satisfy 1 + x sits on x = x tries to sit on x
2
means that this place will be subsumed by all of the right-hand verb's arguments, merging with its first two:- x all reciprocally satisfy 2 + x agrees with x that 0 is the case = x all agree that 0 is the case
e
means that this place will disappear, merging with "baq next-verb".- x takes care of e + x is a cat = x takes care of cat(s).
- Such a slot is known as an exhibitor slot (hence
e
), and the resulting serial is a genitival serial.
a
means that this adjectival place will disappear, and the following verb's first place is modified, attributively when appropriate or otherwise predicatively, by this adjective:- a is small + x is a cat = x is a small cat.
The signature is again written by writing down all the types in parentheses, like (x x 0)
or (x e)
.
There is at most one non-x
in a serial signature. This is because all the other slot types define the serialization behavior for the verb, and a verb must have one unambiguous serialization behavior! So while (c 0 0)
is a valid semantic frame, there cannot be a (x 0 0)
serial behavior, as it wouldn't be clear which of the 0
slots accepts the right-hand verb arguments.
Some verbs cannot participate in serials, and are not part of any serial frame.
Table of semantic frames
TODO
How do they relate?
(This is the author's unofficial theory.)
There is a predictable partial function from semantic frame signatures to serial frame signatures.
If the semantic frame has more than one "digit" (0
, 1
or 2
) in it, then the verb cannot serialize. Example: she.
If it has exactly one "digit": the serialization behavior is "subordinating", and the serial frame is obtained by replacing all c
with x
. Example: tua, leo, taq, mıujeq, huaq, toı.
If there are no "digits":
- Semantic frame
(c)
corresponds to serial frame(a)
. Example: nuı, kue(?!). - Semantic frame
(c c)
corresponds to serial frame(x e)
. Example: hea, kıaı, tuı. - Otherwise (i.e.
(c c c)
and beyond, like kuq), the verb cannot serialize.