Title of article
Movement paradoxes are not paradoxes: A raising approach
Author/Authors
Kwang-sup Kim، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
33
From page
1009
To page
1041
Abstract
Non-nominal complements display peculiar patterns with regard to movement: movement of a non-nominal complement turns an ungrammatical sentence into a grammatical one and vice versa in many cases. The phenomenon, which Bresnan (2001) refers to as a movement paradox, is often used to refute the transformational approach. However, the present study explores the possibility of explaining the movement paradoxes, while maintaining that the dislocated constituents and their gap are related via topicalization. After critically reviewing the base-generation approach proposed by Koster (1978) and Alrenga (2005), this article provides a new approach—the raising approach augmented with a theory of Topic Phrase. According to the raising approach, Topic Phrase consists of a null topic head and its complement, and the former turns a non-nominal into a nominal and triggers topicalization, since it has two important features—[+nominal] and [+topic]. In short, I make two major claims in this article: (i) Topic Phrases, including clausal Topic Phrases, are nominals, and (ii) they must undergo topicalization, which follows from the fact that (i) topics must be referential and (ii) they must be mentioned first. This article shows that movement paradoxes are not paradoxes, since this raising analysis explains all four types of movement paradoxes.
Keywords
Movement paradoxes , Non-nominal subject , Clausal subject , PP subject , Clausal topic , Topic Phrase
Journal title
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Record number
1291057
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