Semantic and formal features: evidence and challenges Elly van Gelderen ALC 7, 12 October 2013 Tucson, AZ.

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Semantic and formal features: evidence and challenges Elly van Gelderen ALC 7, 12 October 2013 Tucson, AZ

Outline 1The importance of features in Minimalism. What are they? 2How does language change shed light on features? 3Where dofeatures `come from’?

The importance of features Chomsky (1965: 87-88): lexicon contains information for the phonological, semantic, and syntactic component. Sincerity +N, -Count, +Abstract... Chomsky (2000: 10): There are two operations (a) features into lexical items (b) lexical items into larger syntactic objects

Features of airplane and build (adapted from Chomsky 1995: 231) airplanebuild semantic: e.g. [artifact]e.g. [action] phonological: e.g. [begins with a vowel; e.g. [one syllable] two syllables] formal: intrinsicoptionalintrinsicoptional [nominal][number][verbal][phi] [3 person][Case][assign accusative] [tense] [non-human]

The "much more important distinction“ (1995: 277): Formal features are: interpretable and uninterpretable airplanebuild Interpr.[nominal][verbal] [3 person][assign [non-human] accusative] Uninterpr [Case][phi]

Chomsky (2001: 10) Phonological features are accessed at PF, the semantic ones at LF, and the formal ones accessible in the NS, but semantic and formal “intersect”. This intersection was not there in Chomsky (1965: 142) where semantic features are defined as not involved in the syntax. The uninterpretable ones are valued and only survive to PF; the interpretable ones are relevant at LF.

Around 1998: AGREE (1)TP T’ TVP [u-phi] DPV’ many buffaloes VPP [i-3] [i-P]are in the room

Feature checking isn’t uniform A)Two-way, reciprocal: agreement [u-phi] and [u-Case]. B)just interpretable: Cinque’s features for modals and possibly [i-phi] in Pronominal Argument Languages. C)One-way, non-reciprocal: [u-neg] and [i-neg] So, `active’ is debatable as is the direction (see e.g. Baker 2008). Carstens (2012) has “delayed valuation”, i.e. no (A) and downward search.

The uninterpretability of C and T If C has a u-Q, that is valued by a wh- element, how can a clause be typed as interrogative? Pesetsky & Torrego’s (2001; 2006) dissociation of valuation and interpretation allows a solution: C has unvalued i-Q. The same would hold for T with an unvalued i-T.

CP and TP (2)VP VCP say [u-ind]C’ CTP that [u-ind]sheT’ T... [i-past]

Semantic and formal overlap: Chomsky (1995: 230; 381) suggests: "formal features have semantic correlates and reflect semantic properties (accusative Case and transitivity, for example)." I interpret this: If a language has nouns with semantic phi-features, the learner will be able to hypothesize uninterpretable features on another F (and will be able to bundle them there).

Loss of semantic features Full verbs such as Old English will with [volition, expectation, future] features are reanalyzed as having only the feature [future] in Middle English. And the negative OE no/ne> ME (ne) not> -n’t > ModE –n’t... nothing, never, etc

Semantic > Interpretable > Uninterpretable (1) Ac nis nan scild trum[ra] wið ðæt... But NEG.is no shield stronger against the... `But there is no stronger shield against...’ (2) ne ne helpeð nawiht eche lif to haben. nor not helps not eternal life to have `Nor does it help to have eternal life.’ (3)I can't do nothing for you either, Billy. (4)No, I never see him these days (BNC - A9H 350)

French Pronoun > Agreement (well known) (1)Se je meïsme ne li diOld French If I myself not him tell `If I don’t tell him myself.’ (Franzén 1939:20, Cligès 993) (2)a.Je lis et j'écris I read and I-write b.*Je lis et écris I read and write c.*Je probablement ai vu ça I probably have seen that

(3)J’ai vuça. I-haveseenthat (4)tuvasoù 2Sgowhere ‘Where are you going?' (5)Moi, je.... me, I... (6)si un: un Russe i va en France Swiss if a Russian il goes to France ‘If a Russian goes to France.’ (Fonseca-Greber 2000: 335)

The cycle of phi-features noun > emphatic > pronoun > agreement >0 [sem][i-phi] [i-phi]/[u-phi][u-phi]

Demonstrative [i-3S] [i-loc] articlecomplementizercopula [u-phi][u-T] [i-loc] (1)Mida i tatáSaramaccan I be yourfather ‘I am your father.’ (McWhorter 1997)

Latin: From Neg to Q (1)tu-neidverituses you-Qthatfearbe `Did you fear that?’ (Greenough et al. 1931: 205) Negatives value the [u-Q] of the PolP through their [i-neg]; “if the negative quality somehow weakens, it is reanalyzed as a PolP head whose polarity is not specified.” (van Gelderen 2011: 295).

Where do features come from? The Minimalist program has shifted the emphasis from UG to third factors and from syntactic parameters to lexical ones, i.e. features. One of the reasons to deemphasize UG is the supposed lack of evolutionary depth. Third factors, however, are vague and feature theory is not well-developed.

From early GenGr to Minimalism Universal Grammar UG and Third factors +>>+ Input (Scottish English, Western Navajo, etc) ==I-language E-language

Borer-Chomsky-Conjecture "All parameters of variation are attributable to differences in the features of particular items (e.g., the functional heads) in the lexicon." (Baker 2008: 156) Muysken (2008: 6): “I find the generative literature on functional categories rather vague.”

Cinque and Rizzi (2008): the number of functional categories is 32 in Cinque (1999: 130) and around 40 in Kayne (2005). Cinque and Rizzi, using Heine & Kuteva’s 2002 work, come up with 400. Benincà & Munaro (2010: 6-7) note that syntax has reached the detail of phonological features. Pinker (1989/2013: 244-5) has 30 for verb semantics.

Cf. phonology: “The main task of feature theory, then, is to find the phonetic features which accurately describe the attested phonologically active classes in the world’s languages” (Samuels 2012: 4). For syntax: We need the semantic categories that feed the formal ones.

The first 20 features in Heine and Kuteva: permissive, possibility, agent, comparative, material, partitive, past/near, A-possessive, since (temporal), superlative, complementizer, dative, infinitive, patient, purpose, temporal, until (temporal), only, NP-and, subordinator. Some of the ones in Pinker: Event, State, Thing, Path, Place, Property, Manner, +/- dynamic, +/-control, place-functions, path- functions, cause- or effect focus,...

Some other questions Muysken (2008: 46): “features which are doubly expressed... but receive a single interpretation, must be functional.” Which feature can value which? [u-phi] is easy, as long as it gets a value such as from i-3, i-P etc. [u-pol]:i-neg? [u-T]:i-past? [u-ind]:i-ind?

How about the order of categories? Chomsky (2001: 12): “Assume that substantive categories are selected by functional categories. V by a light verb, T by C”. Cinque Hierarchy?!

Challenge: acquisition of features and their order Jackendoff (2002), based on Bickerton (1990), suggests that pre-linguistic primate conceptual structure may already use symbols for basic semantic relations. This may include spatial and causal concepts. “Agent First, Focus Last... are `fossil principles’ from protolanguage”. Homo erectus (1 million BP) may have had protolanguage. This gives the innate faculty longer to incorporate this.

The acquisition of semantic features Chomsky (1965: 142): “semantic features... too, are presumably drawn from a universal ‘alphabet’ but little is known about this today and nothing has been said about it here.” Chomsky (1993: 24) vocabulary acquisition shows poverty of the stimulus.

The status of meaning, i.e. sem features “Les idées... ne tirent en aucune sorte leur origine des sens... Notre ame a la faculté de les former de soi-même.” `Ideas do not in any fashion have their origin in the senses... Our mind has the faculty to form those on its own.’ (Arnauld & Nicole 1662 [1965]: 45)

How to address the PoS Pinker (1984: 57): categorization < semantic properties and Lebeaux (1988: 44): grammatical categories are centered in cognitive ones. Where do semantic and cognitive categories come from? UG? Geach (1957: 22-23): “Abstractionists rarely attempt an abstractionist account of logical concepts, like those of some, or, and not”... “In the sensible world you will find no specimens of alternativeness and negativeness from which you could form by abstraction the concept of or or of not”.

Acquisition: sem > [i-F]/[u-F] (1)like a cookie (Abe, 3.7.5) (2)no the monster crashed the planes down like this like that (Abe, 3.7.5) (3)I wan(t) (t)a show you something # I mean like this thin ? (Abe, 3.7.5) (4)I feel like having a pet do you? (Abe, ) (5)watch it walks like a person walks. (Abe, ) (6)Daddy # do you teach like you do [//] like how they do in your school? (Abe, )

Do we need uninterpretable? -Two negative cycles: A) Using an indefinite, e.g. nothing/never/a bit in English, French, Arabic B) Using a new verb, e.g. Chinese -Languages without overt agreement

Conclusions Recent shift towards third factors and parametric features: we need to be careful how many mechanisms we allow. All change is in the lexicon: sem>i-F>u-F Language Change should give insight on the inventory What does the Poverty of the Stimulus argument mean for vocabulary acquisition?

References Adger, David & Peter Svenonius Features in Minimalist Syntax. ms Baker, Mark The Syntax of Agreement and Concord. CUP. Benincà, Paola & Nicola Munaro Introduction. In Benincà, Paola & Nicola Munaro (eds), Mapping the Left Periphery, OUP. Chomsky, Noam Language and Thought. Chomsky, Noam The Minimalist Program. MIT Press. Chomsky, Noam New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind. CUP. Chomsky, Noam Derivation by Phase. Chomsky, Noam Approaching UG from below, in Uli Sauerland et al. (eds), Interfaces + Recursion = Language, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Chomsky, Noam Problems of Projection. Lingua 130:

. Cinque, Guglielmo Adverbs and Functional Heads. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Cinque, Guglielmo & Luigi Rizzi The cartography of syntactic structures V. Moscati, ed. CISCL Working Papers on Language and Cognition, 2, Fodor, Jerry Representations. MIT Press. Geach, Peter Mental Acts. Gelderen, Elly van The Linguistic Cycle. OUP. Gelderen, Elly van Clause Structure. CUP. Heine, Bernd & Tania Kuteva World Lexicon of Grammaticalization. Cambridge University Press. Jackendoff, Ray Semantics and Cognition. MIT Press.

Jackendoff, Ray Foundations of language. Oxford. Lebeaux, David Language acquisition and the form of the grammar. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Muysken, Pieter Functional Categories. CUP Panagiodis, E. Phoevos Diachronic stability and feature interpretability. In Theresa Biberauer (ed.) The Limits of Syntactic Variation. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Pesetsky, David & Esther Torrego The Syntax of Valuation and the Interpretability of Features. In Simin Karimi et al. Phrasal and Clausal Architecture, Amsterdam: John Benjamins..

Pinker, Steven Language Learnability and Language Development. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Pinker, Steven 1989 [2013]. Language Learnability and Cognition. MIT Press. Samuels, Bridget The Emergence of Phonological Forms. ms Shlonsky, Ur The Cartographic Enterprise in Syntax. Language and Linguistics Compass 4/6: