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The English Ditransitive Construction
Goldberg, Adele E. (1995): Constructions. Ch. 6. Lucas Champollion (thanks to Ryan Gabbard for some slides) Nov 15th, 2004
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The Ditransitive Construction
CAUSE-RECEIVE < agent recipient patient > Verb Subject Object Object2 PREDICATE < *** Insert Verb Here *** > Instance or means Pat mailed Bill a letter. John will bake Mary a cake.
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Outline Evidence for the construction
Evidence that it means “X successfully causes Y to receive Z, where X is a volitional and Y is either willing or has no choice” Semantic constraints on X and Y Some systematic metaphors that license extensions from the basic sense
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The Ditransitive Construction: Why It Exists
okMary baked her sister a cake. (meaning: Mary baked a cake with the intention of giving it to her sister.) *Mary baked her sister a cake. (meaning: Sally baked the cake so that her sister wouldn’t have to bake it) *Mary baked her sister a cake. (meaning: Mary baked a cake for herself because her sister told her so) Transfer meaning either in construction or in bake More evidence lies in the semantic constraints
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Semantic Constraints on the Subject
*Joe threw the right fielder the ball he intended the first baseman to catch okJoe painted Sally a picture. Subject must be volitional (i.e. an agent) Problem: okOedipus gave his mother a kiss, okMary accidentally loaned Bob a lot of money Constraints are the same as for murder
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Semantic Constraints on Object1
okShe brought a package to the border. *She brought the border a package. okShe brought a package to the boarder. okShe brought the boarder a package. Object1 must be animate (i.e. a recipient)
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Semantic Constraints on Object1 (contd.)
Must either be willing: *Bill threw the coma victim a blanket or have no choice: okBill gave Chris a headache / a kick / a speeding ticket. Willingness ≠ benefit: okJack poured Jane an arsenic–laced martini.
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Apparent Counterexamples
okThe medicine brought him relief. okThe rain bought us some time. okShe gave me the flu. Subject is not volitional! Do these examples have anything in common? cf. The document supplied us with some entertainment.
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Reminder: Polysemy give, throw, take, feed refuse, deny
X successfully causes Y to receive Z but also: X causes Y not to receive Z X intends to cause Y to receive Z X enables Y to receive Z refuse, deny make, build, get, win, bake Subject Verb Object Object2 permit, allow
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A Systematic Metaphor: Causal Events as Transfers
CAUSE-”RECEIVE” < cause affectee effect > Verb Subject Object Object2 PREDICATE < *** Insert Verb Here *** > Instance or means She gave me the flu. (unintentionally)
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More Systematic Metaphors
Communication as Reception: She told Jo a fairy tale, She wired Jo a message (cf. Jo received the information from Bill) Perceptions as Received Entities: He gave Bob a glimpse (cf. I caught a glimpse from him) Directed Action as Transferred Entity: She blew him a kiss, She threw him a parting glance (cf. All he got from her was a goodbye wave) Facts/Assumptions/Beliefs as Objects: I’ll grant you that much of your argument (cf. I don’t want to give up that assumption)
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A More Complicated Case
Actions for Someone’s Benefit as Transferred Objects: Cry me a river, They’re going to kill Reagan a commie (cf. She graciously offered a ride to the airport, He owes you many favors) recipient does not receive Object2 here ?! Source domain not ‘X causes Y to receive Z’ but ‘X causes Y to receive some object’ Target domain ‘X performs an action for the benefit of Y’ Therefore more constrained, dialectal variation: ?Cry Joe a river, ?Sally cried me a river
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Thanks.
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