
The End of Argument Structure
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Contributors are: Victor Acedo-Matellan, Grant Armstrong, Mark Baker, David Basilico, Maria Cristina Cuervo, E. Matthew Husband, Kyumin Kim, Terje Lohndal, Tatjana Marvin, Jaume Mateu, Mercedes Pujalte, Yves Roberge, Andres Saab, and Lisa Travis.
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Content
- Intro
- SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS: THE END OF ARGUMENT STRUCTURE?
- COPYRIGHT PAGE
- CONTENTS
- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
- CHAPTER 1 REMARKS ON ARGUMENT STRUCTURE
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. THE ISSUE
- 3. THE QUESTIONS
- 4. THE PAPERS
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 2 ON THE ADJECTIVAL COMPONENT OF CHANGE OF STATE VERBS IN SPANISH
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. INTERPRETATIVE AND FORMAL PROPERTIES OF VARI CONSTRUCTIONS
- 3. BACKGROUND AND PROPOSAL
- 3.1. Lexical Decomposition as Syntax
- 3.2. Head Movement
- 3.3. VARI Constructions: A Hypothesis
- 4. VARI CONSTRUCTIONS AS MULTIPLE COPY PRONUNCIATION OF DECOMPOSED VERBS
- 4.1. Degree Modifiers in Change of State Verbs
- 4.2. On the Unique Character of BIEN
- 4.3. On Pronunciation of Multiple Copies
- 4.4. Consequences for Break-Type Verbs
- 5. CONCLUSIONS
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 3 ''OBLIQUENESS'' AS A COMPONENT OF ARGUMENT STRUCTURE IN AMHARIC
- 1. GENERAL FRAMING
- 2. BASICS OF AMHARIC ARGUMENT STRUCTURE
- 3. HIERARCHY IN TRIADIC VERBS
- 4. ANOTHER FACTOR IN AMHARIC ARGUMENT STRUCTURE: ''OBLIQUENESS''
- 4.1. Two Kinds of Triadic Verbs
- 4.2. Dyadic Verbs with Oblique Arguments
- 4.3. Impersonal Monadic Verbs
- 5. ''OBLIQUE'' ARGUMENTS AS NPs GOVERNED BY A NULL P
- 5.1. Motivating the Core Proposal
- 5.2. Developing the Core Proposal
- 5.3. Applying the Core Proposal: Impersonal Verbs
- 5.4. Special Issues with Dyadic Constructions
- 6. ISSUES ARISING
- 6.1. Is Obliqueness Semantically Predictable?
- 6.2. Why Can Only Certain Arguments be Oblique?
- 6.3. Is the Oblique-Direct Distinction Universal?
- 6.4. Possible Implications for Projectionism versus Constructionism
- 7. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 4 THE ANTIPASSIVE AND ITS RELATION TO SCALAR STRUCTURE
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. BACKGROUND ON SCALES
- 3. THE ERGATIVE/ANTIPASSIVE DISTINCTION AS A RESULT/MANNER DISTINCTION
- 3.1. Aspectual Differences
- 3.2. Manner Verbs and Object Deletion
- 3.3. Suffixless Antipassive
- 3.4. Challenges to the Manner/Path Analysis
- 4. THE INCHOATIVE
- 5. ADDING ARGUMENTS IN THE ANTIPASSIVE
- 6. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 5 SOME STRUCTURAL ANALOGIES BETWEEN EXISTENTIAL INTERPRETATION AND TELICITY
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. ESTABLISHING THE EFFECTS OF OBJECTS
- 2.1. Transitivity
- 2.2. Structure of Objects
- 3. THEORIES
- 3.1. Event Composition
- 3.2. Information Structure
- 3.3. Event Composition or Information Structure?
- 4. EXTENDING EVENT COMPOSITION
- 4.1. Composing the VP
- 4.2. Voice in Events and States
- 5. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 6 EXTERNAL ARGUMENT-INTRODUCING HEADS: VOICE AND APPL
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 1.1. Assumptions
- 1.2. Organization of the chapter
- 2. VOICE AND APPL ARE SEMANTICALLY DIFFERENT
- 2.1. No agent-introducing heads in the complements of causatives
- 2.2. ApplP can be the complement of causatives
- 2.3. Korean morphological causatives as applicative-selecting causatives
- 2.4. Semantics of Appl and Voice
- 3. VOICE AND APPL ARE SYNTACTICALLY DIFFERENT
- 3.1. English experiencer have
- 3.2. Morphological evidence to peripheral Appl
- 4. VOICE AND APPL ARE NOT FLAVORS OF ONE ANOTHER
- 5. CONSEQUENCES
- 6. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 7 TOWARD THE END OF ARGUMENT STRUCTURE
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. ARGUMENTS AGAINST LEXICAL ADICITIES
- 2.1. Davidsonian versus Neo-Davidsonian Representations
- 2.2. Severing the Agent
- 2.3. Focus and Full Thematic Separation
- 2.4. Variable Verbal Adicities
- 3. IDIOMS AND THEMES
- 4. CHALLENGES FOR THE SYNTAX-SEMANTICS INTERFACE
- 5. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 8 A NOTE ON APPLICATIVES
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. HIGH AND LOW APPLICATIVES
- 3. APPLICATIVE CONSTRUCTIONS IN SLOVENIAN
- 3.1. Applicative Meanings and Structures of Ditransitive Sentences
- 3.2. Possessor Dative Construction, Unergative Verbs, and Static Verbs
- 3.3. Exceptions
- 4. DESCRIBING THE EXCEPTIONS FROM THE SYNTAX SIDE
- 4.1. Prepositional Dative Construction in Slovenian
- 4.2. Word Order and the High and Low Applicative Readings
- 5. DESCRIBING THE EXCEPTIONS FROM THE SEMANTIC SIDE
- 5.1. A Verb-Sensitive Approach to Dative Alternation
- 5.2. A Possible Solution
- 6. OTHER SOUTH SLAVIC LANGUAGES
- 7. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 9 THE MANNER/RESULT COMPLEMENTARITY REVISITED: A SYNTACTIC APPROACH
- 1. THE MANNER/RESULT COMPLEMENTARITY
- 2. A SYNTACTIC APPROACH TO THE MANNER/RESULT COMPLEMENTARITY
- 3. THE VERB CLIMB AND THE MANNER/RESULT COMPLEMENTARITY
- 4. CONCLUSIONS
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 10 SYNCRETISM AS PF-REPAIR: THE CASE OF SE-INSERTION IN SPANISH
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. THE DISTRIBUTION OF SE CONSTRUCTIONS IN SPANISH
- 3. SOME ASSUMPTIONS: FEATURE INHERITANCE AND SUBCATEGORIZATION
- 4. THE SYNTAX OF SE CONSTRUCTIONS
- 5. A PHASE-BASED APPROACH TO CL-INSERTION
- 6. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- CHAPTER 11 ARGUMENTS FROM THE ROOT VS. ARGUMENTS FROM THE SYNTAX
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO MALAGASY SYNTAX
- 3. SYNTAX CREATES ARGUMENT STRUCTURE: PRELIMINARY SUPPORT
- 3.1. v and Its Flavors in Malagasy
- 3.2. Other Instantiations of v
- 4. SYNTAX CREATES ARGUMENT STRUCTURE: A PROBLEM
- 4.1. Other uses of (m)aha- (from Phillips, 1996)
- 4.2. Telicity in Malagasy
- 4.3. External Arguments Added by Syntax
- 4.4. External Arguments: Argument Structure vs. Syntax
- 5. ROOTS PROVIDE ARGUMENT STRUCTURE: PRELIMINARY REPORT
- 6. CONCLUSION
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- SUBJECT INDEX
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