ATTRIBUTIVES AND IDENTIFICATIONALS 457
(71) a. M odin gorod ne byl čist.
not One City-MASC.NOM.SG NEG WaS-3sG.MASC clean-MASC.SG
"Not one city was clean"
b. *Ne bylo cisto ni odnogo goroda.
NEG WaS-3sG.NEUT clean-NEUT.SG not One City-MASC.GEN.SG
(72) a. Studenty zdes' ne duraki.
student-MAsc.NOM.PL here NEG fools
"The students here are not fools"
b. *Studentov zdes' ne duraki.
student-MAsc.GEN.PL here NEG fools
Although the situation in Russian is more variable (less lexically or syntacti
cally fixed) for the objective/subjective distinction than it is in some other
languages, a tentative hypothesis is that only arguments intended by the
speaker to be interpreted as typical undergoers (i.e. typical theme/patient)
allow encoding with the genitive of negation. This would account for its
occurrence with direct objects, passive subjects and intransitive verbs with
a single undergoer macrorole but will not allow attributives and identifica-
tionals into this class because of their non-typical undergoer status. That is,
like n-cliticization in Italian, this construction has associated with it a strict
view of theme. Dakota and Russian would differ in that the subjective-
objective distinction is made at the lexical level in Dakota but at the contex
tual level in Russian. Furthermore, we see once more in Russian that
attributives and identificationals as a class will fall into the default member
of the opposition.
4.4 The syntactic argument status of attributes and identification-sets
In section 2.1, it was claimed that the previous localist treatment of attribu
tive and identificational expressions was one in which two thematic rela
tions were assumed to be present in a syntactically intransitive structure.
An alternative schema was presented here which also assumes the same two
thematic relations but in reverse: subject = location, attribute/identifica-
tion-set=theme. In section 2.2, it is claimed (Van Valin 1991) that there
may be more core arguments in a clause than macroroles. This discrepancy
is utilized by Van Valin to account for instances of dative case-marking in
Icelandic when accusative case was expected. Briefly, a core argument not
linked to a macrorole is assigned dative case as a default. In the analysis of