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According to Greenberg’s 6th universal, "All languages with dominant VSO order have SVO as an alternative or as the only alternative basic order."

Why are dominant VSO languages predisposed to allow SVO as an alternative?

My next question would be asking for examples from mainly VSO languages performing SVO.

Edit: I understand that this universal may not be 100% accurate. I’m mainly asking about the broader trend of VSO/SVO alternation.

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  • Not an answer to either of your questions, but it’s worth noting that out of the four (as far as I know) languages currently spoken in Europe which have VSO as their base order, only one has a tendency towards SVO. Irish, Scottish and Manx Gaelic are all exclusively VSO, and SVO is only sorta-kinda possible in cleft sentences (if you ignore the initial copula and the relativiser). Welsh was originally the same, but cleft constructions have more or less become the default word order, so it does have SVO tendencies now. Commented Nov 21, 2023 at 19:24

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If you take a Chomskyan view of syntax, it's not possible to get a VSO order without some sort of movement. The arguments to a verb are always Merged in first, and then the subject attaches somewhere higher up; you can't get the subject between the verb and its arguments without something moving.

(In other words, like with many parts of the traditional Chomskyan framework, we assume that all languages work fundamentally like English, and then apply some extra rules on top to explain why they look different. This is a common criticism of the program.)

So according to a Minimalist, the underlying structure would look something like this. (Don't worry about the "little v", it's not relevant to this question.)

SVO tree

Then a movement rule takes our verb and moves it somewhere to the left, perhaps to T.

VSO tree

And now we have a VSO order, "likes Alice Bob".

So according to this Minimalist, why is it likely that we'd also see SVO structure in this language? Well, because to get SVO order, all we'd have to do is put an exception in this movement rule. For example, perhaps this movement rule doesn't happen in a particular type of clause. Then in that type of clause, we'd see SVO order instead.

Or in other words—we already need one movement rule to get VSO order, and we don't need to add any more rules to get an alternation with SVO order, we just need to add a loophole to the one we already have. This makes it very easy for this situation to evolve.

For a specific example, older forms of English had exactly this sort of structure: SVO, with V moving to T in interrogative clauses. Thus, "you do like him" alternates with "do you like him?" (In modern English this still happens, but only certain verbs are allowed to move: *"like you him?") A single rule that applies only in certain contexts thus gets us an SVO~VSO alternation.

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  • So for a VSO language, SVO would result as a loophole that prevents the further movement of the verb in certain contexts. Commented Nov 24, 2023 at 19:21
  • @QuinaliSolaji Yep! According to Minimalism, a VSO language is actually an SVO language plus a movement rule, and any loopholes or exceptions in that movement rule would produce SVO in certain contexts.
    – Draconis
    Commented Nov 24, 2023 at 19:31

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