2014


Weak Island Semantics

Márta Abrusán 2014


Publisher: OUP

Price: 1000 Toman

Download PDF: Weak Island Semantics (Abrusán 2014).


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This book presents a novel semantic account of weak, or selective, islands. Weak islands are configurations that block the displacement of certain elements in a sentence. Examples of island violations with acceptable counterexamples include ‘#How much wine haven’t you drunk?’ (but ‘Which girl haven’t you introduced to Mary?’), ‘#How does John regret that he danced at the party?’ (but ‘Who does John regret that he invited to the party?’) or ‘#How much wine do you know
whether you will produce?’ (but ‘Which glass of wine do you know whether you’ll poison?’). For forty years or more, explanations of the unacceptability of these island constructions have been syntactic. Syntactic accounts have also provided some of the key empirical motivation for Chomsky’s claim
that universal grammar (UG) contains language independent abstract syntactic constraints. But syntactic accounts, however subtle, fail to explain why many weak island violations are made almost acceptable by modals and attitude verbs, as in ‘How much wine aren’t you allowed to drink?’; ‘How fast do you hope Lewis didn’t drive?’; or ‘How does Romeo regret he was allowed to go to the party?’ Dr Abrusán considers which contexts and expressions create – or are sensitive to – weak island
violations, and examines the factors that go some way to curing them. She puts forward a semantic analysis to account for the unacceptability of violations of negative, presuppositional, quantificational and wh-islands. She explains why grammaticality violations can be obviated by certain modal expressions, and
why and how far the grammaticality judgments of speakers depend on the context of the utterance. The book argues that there is no need to assume abstract syntactic rules in order to derive these facts; rather, they can be made to follow from independent semantic principles. If correct, this work has a fundamental consequence for the field of linguistics in general: it removes some of the most important reasons for postulating abstract syntactic rules as part of UG, and hence weakens the
arguments for postulating a module of UG.


About the Author

Marta Abrusan is a CNRS research scientist at the Institut de Recherche en Informatique de Toulouse at the Universite Paul Sabatier. After her PhD in linguistics at MIT she was a postdoctoral fellow at the Collegium Budapest, the Institut Jean-Nicod in Paris and the universities of Oxford and Gottingen. Her published work includes papers in Linguistics and Philosophy, Natural Language Semantics, Semantics and Pragmatics and the Journal of Semantics.




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