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Lecture 2: Constraints on Movement
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Formal movement rules (called Transformations) were first introduced in the late 1950s During the 1960s a lot of work was done to see what could be achieved by using transformations Enthusiastic linguists used transformations to describe phenomena in: SyntaxMorphology SemanticsPragmatics StylisticsPoetics Literary Analysis By the end of the 1960s it was clear that you could do anything with a transformation!
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If transformations can do anything: they can describe everything but explain nothing Suppose we observe some phrase X moving from position Y to position Z Can we describe this? Of course – transformations can describe anything Can we explain why it happens? NO! – Anything could have happened
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It therefore became clear that transformations were too powerful At the same time linguists didn’t want to get rid of transformations altogether The only way forward was to maintain transformations but attempt to limit their power There must be things that you can’t do with a transformation
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The first observation of situations in which things couldn’t move concerned examples such as: The train [ VP came [ PP out [ PP from [ DP Paris]]]] [ PP out from where] 1 did the train [ VP come t 1 ] [ DP where] 1 did the train come out [ PP from t 1 ] * [ from where] 1 did the train come [ PP out t 1 ] So: A PP can move out of a VP A DP can move out of a PP But a PP cannot move out of a PP
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Similarly: They [ VP liked [ DP [ DP John]’s picture]] [ DP whose picture] 1 did they [ VP like t 1 ] * [ DP whose] 1 did they like [ DP t 1 picture] So: A DP can move out of a VP But a DP cannot move out of a DP
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Similarly: They [ VP made [ VP the ice melt]] I thought they would make the ice melt and [ VP make the ice melt] 1 [ IP they did t 1 ] *[ VP the ice melt] 1 they [ VP made t 1 ] So: A VP can move out of an IP But a VP cannot move out of a VP
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It looks as though the movement of a phrase cannot be out of a phrase of the same category An XP cannot move out of an XP
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There are cases where a phrase can move out of a phrase of the same category: He painted [ DP a picture of [ DP a lake]] [ DP what] 1 did he paint [ DP a picture of t 1 ] A DP can move out of a DP
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Sometimes an XP cannot move out of a YP, where XP and YP are not the same category John knows [ DP the woman you sold [ DP your car] to] John likes [ DP the car you sold [ PP to Mary]] * [ DP Which car] 1 does John know [ DP the woman you sold t 1 to] * [ PP to whom] 1 does John like [ DP the car you sold t 1 ]
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Ross (1967) identified a number of constituents from which he claimed it was impossible to move anything He called these constituents ‘Islands’
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No phrase can be moved out of a clause that begins with a wh-element Who 1 can you guess [that Mary likes t 1 ] * Who 1 can you guess [why Mary likes t 1 ] This constraint also covers relative clauses as they begin with a wh-element We like the present [ CP (which) Mary gave to Bill] * who 1 do we like the present [ CP Mary gave to t 1 ]
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No phrase can be moved out of a clause which is contained inside a DP (also covers relative clauses!) He denied [ DP the allegation [ CP that he murdered his wife]] * Who 1 did he deny [ DP the allegation [ CP that he murdered t 1 ]]
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No phrase can be moved out of a CP that is the subject of another clause [ CP that he hid the drugs] was proof of his guilt * what 1 was [ CP that he hid t 1 ] proof of his guilt
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No phrase can move out of a phrase that is coordinated: John [ VP likes beer] but [ VP hates wine] * what 1 does John [ VP like t 1 ] but [ VP hates wine] * what 1 does John [ VP like beer] but [ VP hates t 1 ]
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Islands constrain transformations and so increase their explanatory power But what explains Islands? Why are wh-clauses, complex DPs, sentential subjects and coordinated constituents Islands? Just proposing that there are Islands does not give any clues to why there are islands or what constituents will be islands
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In response to this problem, Chomsky (1973) proposed one general restriction on movement This restriction predicted most of the Islands and so offered an explanation for why certain constructions are Islands
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Subjacency works on the assumption that certain categories are hurdles that have to be jumped over by moving phrases These hurdles were called Bounding Nodes In English: IP and DP are bounding nodes
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No single movement can cross more than one bounding node
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Consider the following Who 1 did [ IP you think [ IP Mary thought [ IP Bill liked t 1 ]]] It appears that three bounding nodes (IPs) are crossed by the wh-element But, if we assume: the wh-element doesn’t move in one go it moves to each vacant specifier of CP in turn then each movement crosses only one IP Who 1 did [ IP you think [ CP t 1 [ IP Mary thought [ CP t 1 [ IP Bill liked t 1 ]]
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The wh-Island Who 1 can [ IP you guess [ CP why [ IP Mary likes t 1 ] Movement to the first CP specifier is blocked by the wh-element why So only long distance movement is possible This crosses two bounding nodes So it violates subjacency
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The complex DP Island Who 1 did [ IP he deny [ DP the allegation [ CP t 1 that [ IP he murdered t 1 ]]] The first movement is fine as it only crosses one bounding node The second movement however crosses both DP and IP and so violates subjacency
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Head movements are always short They never cross clause boundaries Therefore they never get anywhere near violating subjacency So what makes sure they are short?
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V can move to I John love 1 -s [ VP Mary t 1 ] I can move to C can 1 [ IP you t 1 make the tea] V cannot move directly to C * make 1 [ IP you can [ VP the tea t 1 ]] V can move to C only if it first moves to I [ CP who 2 made 1 [ IP t 2 t 1 [ VP the tea t 1 ]]]
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In other words: Heads must move to the their closest head position
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Subjacency constrains phrase movement The head movement constraint constrains head movement But both constraints prevent long distance movement
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A wh-phrase can move to the specifier of CP [ CP who 1 did [ IP you see t 1 ]] It cannot move to the CP more than one clause away: * [ CP who 1 did they ask [ CP why [ IP you can’t see t 1 ]]] The only way a wh-phrase can get to the higher CP is if it goes through the lower CP: [ CP who 1 did they think [ CP t 1 [ IP you can see t 1 ]]
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In other words: A wh-phrase must move to its closest CP specifier This is very similar to the head movement constraint
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A DP can move to the specifier of its own clause (subject) [ IP he 1 was [ VP seen t 1 ]] It cannot move directly to the subject position of the next clause up: * [ IP he 1 seems [ IP it was [ VP seen t 1 ]]] The only way it can get to this position is by going through the lower subject position: [ IP he 1 seems [ IP t 1 to have been [ VP seen t 1 ]]]
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In other words: A DP must move to its nearest subject position Again, this is similar to the head movement constraint
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It seems that there is one main restriction on all movements: Movements must be as short as possible But what is ‘possible’ for a movement depends on what is moving: A head can only move to a head position A wh-phrase can only move to a specifier of CP A DP can only move to a specifier of IP (subject) Thus the constraint is: An element must move to its nearest relevant position
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Constraints have developed from specific to general ideas A-over-A and Islands specific constructions are barriers to movement Subjacency specific nodes in a structure are barriers Relativised Minimality all movements are short Constraints
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