Pied-piping with inversion seems to be found in all Mesoamerican languages. It is documented in many of them, including several
Zapotec languages (San Dionisio Ocotepec Zapotec,
Tlacolula de Matamoros Zapotec, and Quiegolani Zapotec), several
Mayan languages (
Kʼicheʼ,
Kaqchikel, Chuj,
Tzotzil), and several
Mixtecan languages (Ocotepec Mixtec, and
Copala Triqui).
Garifuna, an Arawakan language of
Central America that shares many features with canonical Mesoamerican languages, also has pied-pipiing with inversion in wh-questions, focus sentences, and relative clauses. Pied-piping with inversion is unusual outside Mesoamerica but is documented in
Sasak, an
Austronesian language of
Indonesia (Austin 2001). A somewhat similar phenomenon is found in a number of
Germanic languages in which certain pronominal objects of prepositions appear before the preposition. The following
Dutch examples show that ordinary objects follow the preposition
op "on," but the pronouns
er "it,"
daar "there," and
hier "here" precede the preposition: : Ik reken [op je steun]. ("I count on your support.") : Ik reken
erop/
daarop/
hierop ("I count on it/on that/on this.") Those examples show inversion of a prepositional phrase, but the inversion does not necessarily occur in contexts of pied-piping. Possibly related is the phenomenon known as
swiping in which a wh-phrase is inverted with a governing preposition in the context of
sluicing: : Ralph was arguing, but I don't know who with. Such inversion requires pied-piping but also
ellipsis, unlike Mesoamerican languages. ==See also==