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Syntax Lecture 11: More on the DP
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Introduction We have been assuming: the DP hypothesis rather than
the NP hypothesis:
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Arguments for DP Hypothesis
In the DP analysis D is like all other functional heads It always has one type of complement: NP In the NP analysis D inexplicably cannot have a complement
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Arguments for DP Hypothesis
Other phrases have subject-like elements in specifier The NP analysis has a DP in its specifier
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Arguments for DP Hypothesis
Pronouns are kinds of determiners: They are in complementary distribution with determiners: The man Him *the him Most determiners work as pronouns Have you seen this (picture) Do you want any (potatoes) I bought some (books)
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Arguments for DP Hypothesis
The DP analysis of a pronoun is much more straightforward than The NP analysis of a pronoun
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Posessors The DP analysis provides a position in the DP similar to the position of the subject in the IP Specifier Possessor and subjects are clearly related: They believed in magic Their belief in magic
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Possessors and determiners
Possessors and determiners are in complementary distribution John’s dog The dog * John’s the dog Under the DP analysis possessors and determiners do not occupy the same position So this is a problem
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The status of ‘’s’ The English pre-nominal possessor is marked with the possessive morpheme ’s This is often referred to as the genitive marker But there are a number of reasons to think that this is not a morpheme of genitive case Modern English has no other case morphology The morpheme does not behave like a case morpheme
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How case morphemes behave
Case morphology can affect the form of nouns, adjectives or determiners (or a combination of these) Hungarian – nouns and some determiners (pronouns and demonstratives) (azt) a nagy fiút Finnish – nouns and adjectives Minä parka jouduin siivoamaan. I(Nom) poor(Nom) got to clean `Poor me ended up cleaning.' German – determiners, adjectives and some nouns Den jungen Mann the(acc) young(acc) man
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How case morphemes behave
Importantly, the case morpheme attaches to words, not phrases: azt az embert akiről te figyelmeztettél engem * azt az ember akiről te figyelmeztettél engemet But this is exactly how ’s behaves John’s dog A friend of mine’s dog That man who you warned me about’s dog
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Another phrasal morpheme
There is one other morpheme in English which behaves like this: John’d seen it A friend of mine’ll pay The man who you warned me about’d do it This is the contracted auxiliary John (ha)d seen it A friend of mine (wi)ll pay The man who you warned me about (woul)d do it
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Another phrasal morpheme
This involves a process which: contracts the auxiliary in I makes it a phonological dependent (clitic) on the subject
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Rethinking ‘’s’ Based on this, an analysis of the possessive marker suggests itself It is a contracted head (D) Which becomes a clitic on its specifier (the possessor)
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Possessors and determiners
When there is a possessor there must be a possessive determiner So there cannot be another determiner Other determiners can only appear when there is no possessor Hence possessors and determiners are in complementary distribution
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