Course Description
Constructions like `this book is tough to read’, where the matrix subject is construed as the object of the infinitival clause, have played a major role in syntactic theorizing; they raise challenges for many theories of syntax. How does the relationship between the subject of the clause and the object position of the infinitival clause obtain? Is there a direct movement from the infinitival clause to the matrix clause? Or is this relationship mediated through a combination of syntactic movement and semantic composition? In this class, we will use `tough’-movement as a starting point for explorations of a number of issues in contemporary syntax such as locality, intervention, reconstruction, the A/A-bar distinction, improper movement, and the syntactic/semantic basis for constructing derived predicates. In particular, we will center our discussion around the question of whether function composition is implicated in the analysis of tough constructions, and thereby needs to be available in the grammar. We will also address the issue of selection i.e. why do some predicates but not others participate in the `tough’ construction.
Area Tags: Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic Frameworks
(Sessions 1 & 2) Monday/Thursday 3:00-4:20
Location: ILC S140
Instructors: Rajesh Bhatt & Winfried Lechner
Rajesh Bhatt is Professor of Linguistics, at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He is interested in the comparative syntax of the Modern Indo-Aryan languages, the syntax-semantic interface, Tree Adjoining Grammars, and creation of linguistic resources for South Asian Languages.
Winfried Lechner is Professor of German Linguistics and Theoretical Linguistics at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece. His research interests are located in the areas of syntax, semantics and the interface between these two components. Due to various constraints, Winfried Lechner will only be teaching during Week 1 of the Institute.