Provocative feature deletion: a syntactic model of agreement alternations in noun incorporation contexts
Data(s) |
01/11/2015
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Resumo |
The relationship between noun incorporation (NI) and the agreement alternations that occur in such contexts (NI Transitivity Alternations) remains inadequately understood. Three interpretations of these alternations (Baker, Aranovich & Golluscio 2005; Mithun 1984; Rosen 1989) are shown to be undermined by foundational or mechanical issues. I propose a syntactic model, adopting Branigan's (2011) interpretation of NI as the result of “provocative” feature valuation, which triggers generation of a copy of the object that subsequently merges inside the verb. Provocation triggers a reflexive Refine operation that deletes duplicate features from chains, making them interpretable for Transfer. NI Transitivity Alternations result from variant deletion preferences exhibited during Refine. I argue that the NI contexts discussed (Generic NI, Partial NI and Double Object NI) result from different restrictions on phonetic and semantic identity in chain formation. This provides us with a consistent definition of NI Transitivity Alternations across contexts, as well as a new typology that distinguishes NI contexts, rather than incorporating languages. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://research.library.mun.ca/11761/1/thesis.pdf Nicoll, Katherine Ilia <http://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Nicoll=3AKatherine_Ilia=3A=3A.html> (2015) Provocative feature deletion: a syntactic model of agreement alternations in noun incorporation contexts. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland. |
Publicador |
Memorial University of Newfoundland |
Relação |
http://research.library.mun.ca/11761/ |
Tipo |
Thesis NonPeerReviewed |