The
unidirectionality hypothesis is the idea that grammaticalization, the development of
lexical elements into
grammatical ones, or less grammatical into more grammatical, is the preferred direction of linguistic change and that a grammatical item is much less likely to move backwards rather than forwards on Hopper &
Traugott's cline of grammaticalization. In the words of
Bernd Heine, "grammaticalization is a unidirectional process, that is, it leads from less grammatical to more grammatical forms and constructions". That is one of the strongest claims about grammaticalization, and is often cited as one of its basic principles. In addition, unidirectionality refers to a general developmental orientation which all (or the large majority) of the cases of grammaticalization have in common, and which can be paraphrased in abstract, general terms, independent of any specific case. The idea of unidirectionality is an important one when trying to predict language change through grammaticalization (and for making the claim that grammaticalization can be predicted).
Lessau notes that "unidirectionality in itself is a predictive assertion in that it selects the general type of possible development (it predicts the direction of any given incipient case)," and unidirectionality also rules out an entire range of development types that do not follow this principle, hereby limiting the amount of possible paths of development.
Counterexamples (degrammaticalization) Although unidirectionality is a key element of grammaticalization, exceptions exist. Indeed, the possibility of counterexamples, coupled with their rarity, is given as evidence for the general operating principle of unidirectionality. According to
Lyle Campbell, however, advocates often minimize the counterexamples or redefine them as not being part of the grammaticalization cline. He gives the example of
Hopper and
Traugott (1993), who treat some putative counterexamples as cases of lexicalization in which a grammatical form is incorporated into a lexical item but does not itself become a lexical item. An example is the phrase
to up the ante, which incorporates the preposition
up (a function word) in a verb (a content word) but without
up becoming a verb outside of this lexical item. Since it is the entire phrase
to up the ante that is the verb, Hopper and Traugott argue that the word
up itself cannot be said to have degrammaticalized, a view that is challenged to some extent by parallel usages such as
to up the bid,
to up the payment,
to up the deductions,
to up the medication, by the fact that in all cases
the can be replaced by a possessive (my, your, her, Bill's, etc.), and by further extensions still:
he upped his game 'he improved his performance'. Examples that are not confined to a specific lexical item are less common. One is the English
genitive -'s, which, in
Old English, was a suffix but, in Modern English, is a clitic. As Jespersen (1894) put it, Traugott cites a counterexample from function to content word proposed by
Kate Burridge (1998): the development in
Pennsylvania German of the auxiliary of the preterite subjunctive
modal 'would' (from 'wanted') into a full verb 'to wish, to desire'. A further instance is found in the development of
Irish Gaelic with the origin of the first-person-plural pronoun (a function word) from the inflectional suffix
-mid (as in 'we are') because of a reanalysis based on the verb-pronoun order of the other persons of the verb. Another well-known example is the degrammaticalization of the
North Saami abessive ('without') case suffix -
haga to the postposition 'without' and further to a preposition and a free-standing adverb. Moreover, the morphologically analogous derivational suffix -
naga 'stained with' (e.g., 'stained with coffee', 'stained with oil') – itself based on the
essive case marker *-
na – has degrammaticalized into an independent noun 'stain'. North Saami also shows a tendency toward the debonding of other bound morphemes. Overall, in comparison to various instances of grammaticalization, there are relatively few counterexamples to the unidirectionality hypothesis, and they often seem to require special circumstances to occur. ==Views on grammaticalization== Linguists have come up with different interpretation of the term 'grammaticalization', and there are many alternatives to the definition given in the introduction. The following will be a non-exhaustive list of authors who have written about the subject with their individual approaches to the nature of the term 'grammaticalization'. •
Antoine Meillet (1912): "" ("While the analogy can renew the detail of the forms, but often leaves untouched the overall plan of the grammatical system, the 'grammaticalization' of certain words creates new forms, introduces categories for which there was no linguistical expression, and transforms the whole of the system.") •
Jerzy Kurylowicz (1965): His "classical" definition is probably the one most often referred to: "Grammaticalization consists in the increase of the range of a
morpheme advancing from a lexical to a grammatical or from a less grammatical to a more grammatical status, e.g. from a derivative formant to an inflectional one". Since then, the study of grammaticalization has become broader, and linguists have extended the term into various directions. • Christian Lehmann (1982): Writer of
Thoughts on Grammaticalization and
New Reflections on Grammaticalization and Lexicalization, wrote that "Grammaticalization is a process leading from
lexemes to
grammatical formatives. A number of
semantic,
syntactic and
phonological processes interact in the grammaticalization of morphemes and of whole constructions. A sign is grammaticalized to the extent that it is devoid of concrete
lexical meaning and takes part in obligatory grammatical rules". •
Paul Hopper (1991): Hopper defined the five 'principles' by which you can detect grammaticalization while it is taking place: "layering", the development of additional expressions for a function; "divergence" (also called "split" by other theorists), in which a form develops a grammatical sense in addition to its lexical sense; "specialization", reducing the scope of lexical meaning until only grammatical function remains; "persistence", traces of lexical meaning in a grammaticalized form; and "de-categorialization", the loss of a form's
morphosyntactic properties. •
František Lichtenberk (1991): In his article on "The Gradualness of Grammaticalization", he defined grammaticalization as "a historical process, a kind of change that has certain consequences for the morphosyntactic categories of a language and thus for the grammar of the language. •
James A. Matisoff (1991): Matisoff used the term '
metaphor' to describe grammaticalization when he wrote: "Grammatization may also be viewed as a subtype of metaphor (etymologically "carrying beyond"), our most general term for a meaning shift. [...] Grammaticalization is a metaphorical shift toward the abstract, "metaphor" being defined as an originally conscious or voluntary shift in a word's meaning because of some perceived similarity. •
Elizabeth Traugott &
Bernd Heine (1991): Together, they edited a two-volume collection of papers from a 1988 conference organized by Talmy Givón under the title
Approaches to Grammaticaliztion. They defined grammaticalization as "a linguistic process, both through time and synchronically, of organization of categories and of
coding. The study of grammaticalization therefore highlights the tension between relatively unconstrained lexical expression and more constrained morphosyntactic coding, and points to relative indeterminacy in language and to the basic non-discreteness of categories". •
Olga Fischer &
Anette Rosenbach (2000): In the introduction of their book
Pathways of Change, a summary is given of recent approaches to grammaticalization. "The term 'grammaticalization' is today used in various ways. In a fairly loose sense, 'grammaticalized' often simply refers to the fact that a form or construction has become fixed and obligatory. (...) In a stricter sense, however, (...) the notion of 'grammaticalization' is first and foremost a
diachronic process with certain typical mechanisms." •
Lyle Campbell lists proposed counterexamples in his article "What's wrong with grammaticalization?". In the same issue of
Language Sciences, Richard D. Janda cites over 70 works critical of the unidirectionality hypothesis in his article "Beyond 'pathways' and 'unidirectionality'". • The first monograph on degrammaticalization and its relation to grammaticalization was published in 2009 by Muriel Norde. ==References==