Lecture 4: The Complementiser System

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Syntax Lecture 2: Categories and Subcategorisation.
Advertisements

Lecture 8: Adverbial positions.  ‘Adverbial’ is the cover term for everything which modifies some part of the clause (VP, IP or CP)  It does not name.
Lecture 2: Constraints on Movement.  Formal movement rules (called Transformations) were first introduced in the late 1950s  During the 1960s a lot.
NP Movement Passives, Raising: When NPs are not in their theta positions.
Syntax Lecture 10: Auxiliaries. Types of auxiliary verb Modal auxiliaries belong to the category of inflection – They are in complementary distribution.
Dr. Abdullah S. Al-Dobaian1 Ch. 2: Phrase Structure Syntactic Structure (basic concepts) Syntactic Structure (basic concepts)  A tree diagram marks constituents.
Morphology and Syntax Deviations from neutral word order.
Syntax Lecture 9: Verb Types 2.
Linguistic Theory Lecture 7 About Nothing. Nothing in grammar Language often contains irregular paradigms where one or more expected forms are absent.
Lecture 11: Binding and Reflexivity.  Pronouns differ from nouns in that their reference is determined in context  The reference of the word dog is.
Week 12b. Relative clauses CAS LX 522 Syntax I. Relative clauses Another place where we see wh- movement, besides in explicit questions (either in the.
Syntax Lecture 12: Adjectival Phrases. Introduction Adjectives, like any other word, must conform to X-bar principles We expect them – to be heads – to.
Lecture 6: Verbs with Clausal Arguments
1 Annotation Guidelines for the Penn Discourse Treebank Part B Eleni Miltsakaki, Rashmi Prasad, Aravind Joshi, Bonnie Webber.
1 Introduction to Computational Linguistics Eleni Miltsakaki AUTH Fall 2005-Lecture 2.
Matakuliah: G0922/Introduction to Linguistics Tahun: 2008 Session 10 Syntax 1.
Syntax Lecture 3: The Subject. The Basic Structure of the Clause Recall that our theory of structure says that all structures follow this pattern: It.
Week 14b. PRO and control CAS LX 522 Syntax I. It is likely… This satisfies the EPP in both clauses. The main clause has Mary in SpecIP. The embedded.
CAS LX 522 Syntax I Week 11a. Wh-movement.
LEL 1 Syntax 7: Auxiliaries in English and sentence structure.
Noun Clauses Yang & Phoebe.
Linguistic Theory Lecture 3 Movement. A brief history of movement Movements as ‘special rules’ proposed to capture facts that phrase structure rules cannot.
ADVERBIAL CLAUSE. Adverbial clause is a clause introduced by a subordinate. It is used to modify a verb, an adjective, an adverb. Since the adverbial.
Finite Subordinate clauses Subordinate function as dependent within some larger construction. Examples of common subordinate clauses The underlined clause,
Embedded Clauses in TAG
1 LIN 1310B Introduction to Linguistics Prof: Nikolay Slavkov TA: Qinghua Tang CLASS 14, Feb 27, 2007.
Extending X-bar Theory DPs, TPs, and CPs. The Puzzle of Determiners  Specifier RuleXP  (YP) X’ – requires the specifier to be phrasal – *That the book.
Kinds of Sentence:. Kinds of Sentences: Sentences can be classified into five categories according to the meaning or function(s). They are:- 1.Assertive.
CHECK-UP Fill in each blank with a suitable word or phrase:
Syntax Lecture 8: Verb Types 1. Introduction We have seen: – The subject starts off close to the verb, but moves to specifier of IP – The verb starts.
Lecture 9: The Gerund.  The English gerund is an intriguing structure which causes a particular problem for X-bar theory  [His constantly complaining.
Ex 3.2 Oct. 1, 2012 – Day 14 Introduction to Syntax ANTH 3590/7590 Harry Howard Tulane University.
IV. SYNTAX. 1.1 What is syntax? Syntax is the study of how sentences are structured, or in other words, it tries to state what words can be combined with.
Syntax Lecture 5: More On Wh-movement. Review Wh-movement: – Moves interrogative ‘wh’-phrase – from various positions inside the IP – to the specifier.
October 15, 2007 Non-finite clauses and control : Grammars and Lexicons Lori Levin.
Lecture 7: Tense and Negation.  The clause is made up of distinct structural areas with different semantic purposes  The VP  One or more verbal head.
Subordination & Content clauses
Lecture 10: Topic, Focus and Negative Fronting.  So far we have seen that the front of the clause is reserved for the part of sentence semantics that.
Revision.  Movements leave behind a phonologically null trace in all their extraction sites.
Rules, Movement, Ambiguity
Linguistic Theory Lecture 5 Filters. The Structure of the Grammar 1960s (Standard Theory) LexiconPhrase Structure Rules Deep Structure Transformations.
1 LIN 1310B Introduction to Linguistics Prof: Nikolay Slavkov TA: Qinghua Tang CLASS 16, March 6, 2007.
Syntax Lecture 6: Missing Subjects of Non-finite Clauses.
Types of English sentences
Lecture 1: Trace Theory.  We have seen that things move :  Arguments move out of the VP into subject position  Wh-phrases move out of IP into CP 
Noun Clauses A clause is a structure that has a subject and a verb. There are two kinds of clauses: independent and dependent. An independent clause is.
X-Bar Theory. The part of the grammar regulating the structure of phrases has come to be known as X'-theory (X’-bar theory'). X-bar theory brings out.
This I Believe Essay Writer’s Workshop: Introductions, Juicy Details, & Conclusions 8 th ELA St. Joseph School.
Noun Clauses Jack left during class. I wonder what happened.
Lecture 6: More On Wh-movement
Lecture 2: Categories and Subcategorisation
Lecture 4: The Complementiser System
Complex Sentence: (2) The Noun Clauses 5th Lecture
Structure, Constituency & Movement
Lecture 3: Functional Phrases
Syntax Lecture 9: Verb Types 1.
Lecture 4b: Verb Processes
Lecture 7: Missing Subjects of Non-finite Clauses
Syntax Lecture 10: Verb Types 2.
Lecture 12: Summary and Exam
4.3 The Generative Approach
Lecture 10 Krisztina Szécsényi
Finite Clauses.
Lecture 8: Verb Positions
: 2018.
: 2018.
Noun clauses.
Principles and Parameters (I)
Syntax Lecture 12: Extended VP.
Presentation transcript:

Lecture 4: The Complementiser System Syntax Lecture 4: The Complementiser System

Complementisers Complementisers are words which introduce subordinate clauses: I know that [he’s mad] I wonder if [you’ve heard] I was hoping for [it to be sunny] Unlike other subordinating particles, they always precede the subordinate clause: John left though he didn’t want to John left, he didn’t want to though * I know he’s mad that

Complementisers and X-bar If X-bar theory applies to everything: Complementisers are heads They project a ‘complementiser phrase’ They have complements They have specifiers

The complementiser as the head Clauses differ in force Some make statements Some ask questions The force of the sentence is often determined by the complementiser: He stated that I was right I asked if I was right

Where is the CP in the clause? It is not part of the IP: All the positions in the IP are taken Specifier = subject Head = inflection Complement = VP CP is independent of IP: I wonder if [I’m not totally sane] and [he’s not totally mad] They say that he’s mad. But if [so], then so am I

Where is the CP in the clause? Complementisers form a constituent with the clause: This shows [that he is mad] and [that I’m not] They say [that I’m mad] but I don’t believe [it] * They say [that I’m mad] but I don’t believe that [it] It replaces C + IP, not just IP

IP as complement of complementiser Complements are phrases that always follow heads IP is a phrase that always follows the complementiser Functional heads select for a single complement Complementisers only ever precede IPs

Features of the Complementiser Complementisers can be declarative and interrogative: +wh = interrogative = if -wh = declarative = that Complementisers can also be distinguished in terms of what kind of clause they introduce I know [that he disappeared] finite clause I long [for him to disappear] infinitival clause

Features of the Complementiser So what about this?

Whether Whether can be used to introduce non-finite interrogatives clauses: He wondered whether [to stay in bed] However, whether is unlike a complementiser: It can introduce both finite and non-finite clauses He wondered whether [he should stay in bed]

Whether It can introduce a clause with a ‘missing subject’ * I am anxious for [to leave] It can be coordinated with an interrogative phrase He wondered whether and (if so) when to tell her *he wondered if and (if so) when to tell her This suggest that whether is not a complementiser but more like an interrogative phrase (more on these later)

Obligatory nature of the complementiser If the complementiser provides the force of the sentence, it should always be present. Sometimes there is no complementiser I think that he fled I think he fled It seems that we have to suppose an invisible complementiser: I think [CP e [IP he fled]]

Evidence for the empty complementiser (argument 1) If there were no complementiser there would be no CP So verbs with clausal complements could take IP or CP complements I think [CP that he fled] I think [IP he fled] But what a verb takes as its complement is a lexical matter – unpredictable/idiosyncratic

Evidence for the empty complementiser (argument 1) But EVERY verb which takes CP complement takes IP complements – so this is predictable I think/suppose/said/know/feel/... (that) he fled If the complementiser can be empty: all these verbs take only CP complements I think [CP that/e he fled] whether the complementiser is pronounced or not is an idiosyncratic fact about complementisers

Evidence for the empty complementiser (argument 2) I said yesterday that he fled I said that yesterday he fled When a modifier is next to the verb, it modifies it – when it is separated from the verb, it modifies the following clause I said yesterday he fled This is ambiguous – but why? If there is an empty complementiser it is easy to account for I said yesterday e he fled I said e yesterday he fled

Evidence for the empty complementiser (argument 3) Certain questions involve a wh-phrase in front of the subject I wonder [why he fled] The subject is in the IP specifier position (like all other subjects) The wh-phrase must therefore be outside the IP

Evidence for the empty complementiser (argument 3) Wh-phrases are phrases – so they can’t be heads A suitable position for a phrase which precedes the IP is the specifier of CP If there is a CP, there must be a C – but this in empty in this case

Wh-movement Many wh-phrases which appear in the specifier of CP have other functions inside the IP Who did you meet object Who did he say fled subject When will you leave modifier

Wh-movement These positions are always empty when there is a wh-phrase in CP specifier * who did you meet him * who did you say he fled * when will you leave at 6 o’clock This suggests that the wh-phrase starts in these positions and moves

Wh-movement Wh-phrases start off in the position appropriate to their function Object Subject Modifier Then they move to the specifier of CP

Evidence in favour of wh-movement (argument 1) Sometimes the wh-phrase does not move You saw who! He said who fled! You will leave when! These are called echo questions They don’t have the same meaning as wh-questions with moved wh-phrases But they do show that wh-phrases can occupy these positions

Evidence in favour of wh-movement (argument 2) When ‘want’ is followed by ‘to’ they can be contracted into ‘wanna’ Who do you want to fight Who do you wanna fight

Evidence in favour of wh-movement (argument 2) But this is not always possible Who do you want to fight Bill * Who do you wanna fight Bill The difference is in the function of the wh-phrase Who do you want to fight who = object You want to fight him Who do you want to fight Bill who = subject You want him to fight Bill

Evidence in favour of wh-movement (argument 2) When there is a subject, it sits between ‘want’ and ‘to’ I want him to go Obviously ‘want’ and ‘to’ cannot contract in this case But the only way a wh-phrase at the beginning of a sentence can interfere between ‘want’ and ‘to’ is if it sits between then at some point So it must have been in this position once, and then moved

Examples These can contract

Examples Then movement takes place These can’t

Conclusion Complementisers introduce clauses They determine the force of the sentence They provide a position for wh-phrases to move to This is not surprising as wh-phrases appear in questions and this is to do with the force of the sentence