https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/gateway/plugin/WebFeedGatewayPlugin/atomLSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstracts2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00David Robinsondrobinson@lsadc.orgOpen Journal Systems<p><em>LSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstracts</em> is a serial publication with detailed abstracts based on talks and posters presented at the Annual Meeting. As of 2016, this publication no longer accepts submissions, as it has been replaced by <a href="https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/PLSA" target="_self"><em>Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America</em></a>, which publishes articles (up to 15 pages in length), rather than abstracts.</p>https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3013Adjective Agreement in Noon: Evidence for a Split Theory of Noun-Modifier Concord2015-10-28T12:59:28+00:00Nicholas Baier
I have uploaded my abstract as a pdf.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2998Word and syllable constraints in Indonesian adaptation: OT analysis2021-02-11T17:29:35+00:00Saleh BataisCaroline Wiltshire
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Using original data of syllabic adaptations of borrowed words produced by </span><span style="font-size: medium;">24</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> native speakers of Indonesian, we find both deletion and epenthesis to resolve word-final clusters, while word-initial clusters sometimes have epenthesis and sometimes are tolerated intact.</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> </span><span style="font-size: medium;">We show that the adaptations of Arabic and Dutch loanwords obey an Indonesian limit on complex codas, and furthermore reveal two subtle constraints: bisyllabic minimal word size and falling sonority across syllable boundaries. By showing that distinct adaptations are conditioned by the same markedness constraints, the OT analysis corroborates a view of borrowing as a phonological, rather than purely phonetic, process. </span></p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3001Syntactic categories informing variationist analysis: The case of English copy-raising2021-02-11T17:31:58+00:00Marisa Alana Brook
<p>This paper re-examines variation between the comparative complementizers (AS IF, AS THOUGH, LIKE, THAT, and AS) that follow verbs denoting ostensibility (SEEM, APPEAR, LOOK, SOUND, and FEEL) in the large city of Toronto, Canada. Given that younger speakers appear to be using more of these structures in the first place, I evaluate the hypothesis that there is a trade-off in apparent time between these finite structures and the non-finite construction of Subject-to-Subject raising. Focusing on the verb SEEM, I find that the non-finite structures are losing ground in apparent time to the finite ones. I subsequently address the issue of how best to divide up the finite tokens as co-variants opposite the finite constructions, and find that a split according to syntactic properties – whether or not the copy-raising transformation is permitted – tidily accounts for the patterning and reveals a straightforward change in progress. The results reaffirm the value of using variationist methodology to test competing claims, and also establish that variation can behave in a classic way even among whole syntactic categories.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2995The spread of the High toned /il/ in Seoul Korean: from "one" to other meanings2021-02-11T17:38:02+00:00Sunghye Cho
<p>Seoul Korean is known to show a LH-LH phrasal tonal pattern in an Accentual Phrase (AP), unless an AP-initial consonant is tensed or aspirated (Jun 1993, 2000). Since an AP shows LHLH unless the phrase-initial segment is tensed or aspirated, a vowel-initial AP is expected to show LHLH. However, Jun & Cha (2011) report that an AP-initial /il/ is sometimes produced with a H tone. Their study<span style="color: #008000;"> </span>finds that i) younger speakers aged less than the mid 40s are more likely to produce /il/ with a H tone; ii) out of three meanings of /il/, 'one (1)', 'day', and 'work', /il/ meaning 'one' is most frequently produced with a H tone; iii) the High toned /il/ seems to be a unique feature of Seoul Korean.</p><p>Since Jun & Cha (2011) is the only previous study on the phenomenon, there is still much to be learned about its development. In particular, considering that many studies on linguistic changes have shown that a linguistic change is the most advanced among adolescents (e.g., Trudgill, 1974; Labov, 2001; and among others), it is hard to fully describe a developing sound change without investigating teenagers. Thus, I examine the High toned /il/ phenomenon by conducting a production experiment with 40 speakers of Seoul Korean and I provide further evidence that the phenomenon is spread to all meanings of /il/.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2988The Linguistic Status of Predictions and Feature Ranks from SVM Text Classifiers2021-02-11T17:39:12+00:00Jonathan Dunn
<p>Text classification systems are capable of predicting certain characteristics of a text's author (e.g., gender and age) using only linguistic properties. This paper asks why such predictions are possible and how they can be interpreted. There are three factors: (1) the nature of the features used by the system; (2) the robustness of the predictions across time and genres; (3) the amount of data required for training and testing. Some classification predictions (e.g., gender) are based on non-content linguistic material that generalizes across time and genre. These classifications are characterized by stable performance and feature ranks, and permit linguistic interpretation.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2997The prosody of negative yeah2021-02-11T17:41:04+00:00Valerie FreemanRichard WrightGina-Anne Levow
<p>Normally, <em>yeah</em> has positive polarity, but with a change in prosody, it can convey a negative stance (e.g., polite disagreement/rejection). This study examines acoustic-prosodic features of "negative yeah" in a stance-rich corpus of collaborative tasks. Four categories are identified based on degree of agreement/acceptance and distinguished by an interaction between pitch and intensity: while two groups have low, flat pitch, and two have high domed or dipping contours, this division is cross-cut by intensity, again low-flat vs. high domed. These patterns show that fine-grained stance analysis can reveal word-level acoustic patterns that are not apparent in coarser approaches. </p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3002Convergence through divergence: compensatory changes in phonetic accommodation2021-02-11T17:41:41+00:00Jevon Heath
<p>In phonetic accommodation, talkers talk differently based on their interlocutors' speech. This is generally convergence, but simultaneous convergence along incompatible dimensions is not always possible. In the current study, I found that when exposed to artificially extended VOT, speakers shortened their stop closures, in divergence from the model talker. I interpret these adjustments as compensatory changes resulting from individual learned patterns of articulation. Individual differences in the phonetic features adjusted in accommodation may reflect constraints on the potential pathways of sound change. Additionally, accommodation studies must take multiple dimensions of phonetic similarity into account in assessing how much accommodation occurs.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3020Serialization in Complex Predicates in MalakMalak2021-02-11T17:42:37+00:00Dorothea Hoffmann
<p>While complex verbs are well attested in Australian languages and elsewhere, in MalakMalak two systems of multi-verb constructions combine in a typologically rare setup: First, complex predicates consist of an uninflecting open-classed coverb and an inflecting verb (IV) of a closed class of six. Second, coverbs combine in serial constructions as part of a complex predicate with up to four coverbs encoding multiple or single events. This overlap provides a unique opportunity to examine shared and distinctive features. I argue for an analysis of MalakMalak's complex predicates' argument structure in terms of argument unification (Bowern 2010) of coverb and IV.Â</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3003A unified treatment of the exceptions to the Agent/ECM Correlation2021-02-08T10:59:46+00:00Yuki Ito
<p><span style="font-size: 12.000000pt; font-family: 'TimesNewRomanPSMT';">Based on the contrast between the </span><span style="font-size: 12.000000pt; font-family: 'TimesNewRomanPS'; font-style: italic;">believe-class </span><span style="font-size: 12.000000pt; font-family: 'TimesNewRomanPSMT';">and the </span><span style="font-size: 12.000000pt; font-family: 'TimesNewRomanPS'; font-style: italic;">wager-class </span><span style="font-size: 12.000000pt; font-family: 'TimesNewRomanPSMT';">verbs, Pesetsky (1992) makes a generalization that agentive verbs do not allow ECM (the Agent/ECM Correlation). <span style="font-size: 12.000000pt; font-family: 'TimesNewRomanPSMT';">However, he notes two classes of exceptions to the generalization.</span> I argue that the two classes of exceptions can be uniformly treated as causatives and that the Agent/ECM Correlation can be seen as an instance of the broader l-syntax finding that – not all internal arguments are created equal – with agentive activity verbs the root selects an internal argument, but not with change-of-state verbs (Basilico 1998, Hale and Keyser 2002, Alexiadou and Schäfer 2011, Cuervo 2014).</span></p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2994Semantic Bleaching and the Emergence of New Pronouns in AAVE2021-02-11T17:49:04+00:00Taylor W. JonesChristopher S. Hall
AAVE is developing new pronouns, facilitated by the semantic bleaching of the word <em>nigga</em> We show <em>nigga</em> is not specified for race, gender, or humanness (although default is [+human] and [+male]). Using 20,000 tweets and field notes from NYC and Philadelphia, we demonstrate that there are new first person pronouns in AAVE based on <em>nigga</em> (e.g. 1sg <em>a</em> <em>nigga</em>) moreover, we demonstrate they pattern with true pronouns and not imposters (Collins & Postal, 2010) with respect to binding and verbal agreement. We discuss the origin of these new pronouns, related grammatical forms (including vocatives and honorifics), and rate of adoption and current rates of use.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3012Boundedness of verbal and adjectival predicates in Mandarin2015-10-28T12:59:27+00:00Charles Lam
<p dir="ltr"><span>This study extends the boundedness account for </span><span>ba</span><span>-construction in Mandarin to transitive comparatives and hypothesizes that the selection in </span><span>ba</span><span>-construction and transitive comparatives constrained by boundedness, where boundedness can be manifested in terms of telicity of VPs, quantization of internal arguments or measure phrases.</span></p><p dir="ltr">This generalized account shows how formal semantic properties affect syntactic selection and explains some sentences that existing accounts do not. Also, the proposal implicates a homomorphic syntax-semantics mapping across V and A categories, which is superior than category-specific theories.</p><div><span><br /></span></div>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3010Evidence of Language Contact: Source Prepositional Phrases in Taiwanese Southern Min2021-02-11T17:50:50+00:00Yen-Ting Lin
This paper presents a new corpus-based study on the distributional pattern of source Prepositional Phrases (source PPs) in Taiwanese Southern Min (TSM), as evidence of contact with Austronesian languages. Literature on language contact suggests that while contact-induced changes affect the less powerful/prestigious language, effects also occur in the inverse direction due to imperfect second language acquisition (LaPolla 2001, Chappell 2006). Due to its geographical proximity to the Austronesian language territory, Taiwan serves as a linguistic laboratory for studying language contact. Unlike other Chinese spoken varieties, TSM has contact with Austronesian languages.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3000Swedish relative clauses as weak islands2021-02-11T17:53:10+00:00Filippa Lindahl
<p>Some recent accounts of relative clause extraction (RCE) in Swedish assume that clauses that allow extraction do not themselves involve A-bar dependencies, and that RCE is possible only from subject relatives (e.g. Kush et al. 2013). I present evidence that Swedish allows A-bar movement from non-subject RCs as well. But not just any type of phrase can be extracted. For example, certain non-argument wh-phrases cannot move out. This means that Swedish RCs are weak, rather than strong islands (cf. Szabolcsi 2006). Szabolcsi takes an algebraic approach to weak islands where phrases that denote individuals, which can be collected into sets forming Boolean algebras, can be extracted, whereas phrases that denote non-individuals, which cannot be collected into such sets, cannot. However, it is not obvious how to extend such an approach to Swedish RCs, since they allow extraction of some phrases that denote non-individuals, like <em>how late</em>, as long as they are linked to the discourse. Instead, I propose that the phrases that can move out of relative clauses carry discourse-related features (DR), and that the C-heads in Swedish RCs attract DR-marked phrases, making them available in later stages of the derivation. </p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3014Nasalization as a Repair for Voiced Obstruent Codas in Noon2021-02-11T17:57:01+00:00John Merrill
The Senegalese language Noon exhibits a pattern by which the voiced stop phonemes /b, d, ɟ, g/ surface as nasals [m, n ɲ, ŋ] in coda position, undergoing complete neutralization with /m, n, ɲ, ŋ/. This allophonic alternation can be seen as a repair to the cross-linguistic constraint against voiced obstruents in coda position. However, the only otherwise attested repair to this marked structure is devoicing. Why should devoicing be so overwhelmingly preferred to other logical alternatives such as nasalization or gliding? Steriade (2008) answers this question with reference to her P-Map hypothesis, arguing that a [b~p] alternation is preferred because the perceptual distance between these sounds is less in this environment than between [b] and [m]; in essence, the synchronic system prefers a repair that changes a sound as little as possible, as determined by perceptual distinctness. The Noon facts are a clear counter-example to this prediction, and challenge any answer to the above question which requires synchronic systems to prefer the most "phonetically natural" repair.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3015Ideophone-gesture composites: depictive type, sendory class, and modality2021-02-11T17:58:35+00:00Janis Nuckolls
Our paper seeks to clarify the interrelations between ideophones and gestures in the Pastaza dialect of Ecuadorian Quichua. We argue that in some instances there is a very straightforward semantic relationship between ideophones and gestures, especially when they depict visually observable motion. In other instances, it's necessary to consider not only the interrelations between ideophones and gestures, but between ideophones, verbs and gestures, because the ideophone and its gesture are specifying the manner of a verb's motion, or an image of the verb's action as ongoing, or accomplished and complete. Gestures, therefore, not only illustrate ideophones' meanings, but also tie those meanings together with a verb's grammatical and semantic specifications.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3018A Topic Time coreference analysis of tense "harmony" in pseudoclefts2021-02-11T17:59:40+00:00Teresa O'Neill
<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>This paper offers a new analysis of so-called tense "harmony" in specificational pseudoclefts (Higgins 1979; Sharvit 2003; Romero 2004). I take a referential approach to tense, where tenses relate two time pronominals: Topic Time (TT, Klein 1994) and Reference Time (RT) (Utterance Time, UT, in main clauses). Although binding between either UT or matrix Event Time (ET) and embedded RT derives the interpretations of most embedded tenses, binding cannot fully account for embedded tenses in specificational pseudoclefts.I propose that </span><span>Topic Time coreference </span><span>derives puzzling restrictions on embedded tenses in pseudoclefts in languages both with and without sequence of tenses (SOT). </span></p></div></div></div>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3019Order in the DP! On word order and the structure of the DP2021-02-11T18:37:38+00:00Sarah OuwaydaUr Shlonsky
Novel observations show Cinque's (2005) phrasal movement proposal makes correct predictions on the grammaticality of word orders in Lebanese Arabic noun phrases. Adding an adjective yields grammatical orders Cinque (2005) cannot derive. We show that assuming an additional merge position – either for demonstratives or for numerals – derives the orders without losing Cinque's typological predictions, and we present evidence favoring an additional <em>numeral</em> position.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2989How is contraction not possible here?2021-02-11T18:39:48+00:00Marjorie Pak
<p>While <em>how</em>-questions typically elicit information about manner or instrument, English <em>how</em>-questions have an additional, largely unnoticed interpretation: they can be used (often rhetorically) to express surprise that the proposition under <em>how</em> holds at all (<em>How is Chili's still open?</em>) While these "propositional <em>how</em>-questions" freely allow negation, they do not allow neg-contraction (?*<em>How isn't Chili's open yet?</em>). I propose that Neg-to-C raising is blocked because it would enable Neg to (undesirably) scope over a covert VERUM operator in C that contributes to the 'surprise at the true-status of p' reading.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3005Rescuing Broken Dependency in Korean Fragments2021-02-11T18:42:57+00:00Bum-Sik ParkHyosik Kim
<p>Korean FAs with/without their morphological markers can be captured by ellipsis approach. The presence and absence of trouble makers encoded with offending *s determines the acceptability of FAs. The proposed analysis extends to the variability of postposition-stranding and a certain asymmetry in island-violating fragments. </p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2990"Maybe" not all scalar implicatures are created equal2021-02-11T18:44:01+00:00Stephen Politzer-Ahles
<span>Most previous neurolinguistic experiments on scalar implicature have focused on the <<em>some</em>,<em>all</em>> scale. We examined the processing of the <<em>maybe</em>,<em>definitely</em>> scale using EEG and MEG. Participants read the word "maybe" in correct contexts, semantically incorrect contexts (where only "definitely not" would have been true), and pragmatically infelicitous contexts (where "definitely" was true). Both violations elicited N400 effects, the effects differed in a late time window (suggesting that the brain was sensitive to different types of meaning, semantic and pragmatic). These findings do not replicate EEG findings on <<em>some</em>,<em>all</em>>, suggesting that different types of scalar inferences may be processed differently.</span>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3023Improving juror comprehension: reading while listening2021-02-11T18:45:45+00:00Janet H. Randall
No abstract. See PDF.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2991The emphatic interpretation of English verb-phrase preposing2021-02-11T18:46:56+00:00Bern Samko
<p class="p1">This paper examines the emphatic interpretation associated with English verb-phrase preposing (VPP). Two main conclusions emerge. First, the emphatic interpretation is not an idiosyncratic property of VPP. Second, the interpretation is triggered not by any property of VPP, but rather by repetition of a lexical verb with a particular intonational contour.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3017Are phonological features of roots in syntax? Evidence from Guébie2021-02-11T18:48:38+00:00Hannah Sande
<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>Based on original field data, I demonstrate that in Guébie (Kru, Niger-Congo), third person pronouns </span><span>phonologically </span><span>resemble their antecedents. This system, along with other phonologically determined agreement systems, pose problems for our traditional Y-model of grammar, which assumes that phonological features are not present in the syntax (cf. DM, Marantz 1995), thus morphosyntactic processes like agreement should not be able to access phonological features. </span></p><p><span>Here I address the question of whether phonologically determined agreement systems can be modeled without requiring syntax to be sensitive to phonological features. To do this I argue that pronouns select for an NP complement (cf. Elbourne 2001), where the pronoun enters into an agree relation with its NP complement. When spelled out, the morphologically agreeing heads must be phonologically similar, and this overt agreement licenses ellipsis of the NP.</span></p></div></div></div>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2996Split Number in Nungon2021-02-11T18:50:04+00:00Hannah S Sarvasy
"Mixed" or "top and second" number systems (Dixon 2012:52, Corbett 2000:120-121), in which different number systems occur in different parts of a language's grammar, are not unusual in Papuan languages. The Animacy Hierarchy (Corbett 2000:56; Smith-Stark 1974) dictates that if a grammar involves more than one number system, the system that includes more number distinctions should function higher on the hierarchy (Corbett 2000:121). Papuan languages of the Finisterre branch of the Finisterre-Huon language group (Madang and Morobe Provinces, Papua New Guinea) are unusual in that number system splits may be found, not only along the Animacy Hierarchy, but between different sets of pronouns, and even between different verbal tense markings. This paper describes the number system splits in the Finisterre Papuan language Nungon and gives historical explanations for the splits between pronoun sets and some of the splits between tenses.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3007Forceful Contact in a Result Prominent Language2021-02-11T18:53:27+00:00Ronald P Schaefer
<p>Levin and Rappaport Hovav (1995) remind us that manner and result verbs often exhibit complementary distribution within a given language. They also note that when a main verb lexically specifies manner or result, the complementary component can be expressed outside the verb, in a satellite constituent of some sort. In Rappaport Hovav and Levin (2010), manner/result complementarity constrains verb root lexicalization. Building on this, Erteschik-Shir and Rapoport (2010) examine English verbs of contact, e.g. <em>smear</em>, <em>splash</em>, whose complements specify a result relation between moveable object and stationary locatum. Classically, these verbs show a locative alternation with holistic ~ partitive interpretations (Levin 1993). For this paper I examine forceful contact expressions in Emai (West Benue Congo, Edoid in Williamson and Blench 2000). Relatively strict SVO, Emai manifests little inflectional morphology and few prepositions. Its motion predications express manner and result as one verb in series with another or as verb plus postverbal particle. Lacking verbs in series or postverbal particles, forceful contact in Emai reflects simple and complex predications.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/2993Explaining Predicate Inversion with a Clause-Internal FocP2021-02-11T18:54:04+00:00Nagarajan Selvanathan
Specificational copular clauses, in one school of thought, are considered to be inverted predications from an underlying small clause (Moro 1997, Mikkelsen 2004, den Dikken 2006 etc). One aspect of specificational copualr clauses that is often neglected is the fact that such clauses have a unique information structure profile in requiring an obligatorily focused post-copular constituent. In this extended abstract, I argue that the reason for this does not lie in movement of the pre-copular phrase to a topic position (as argued by Mikkelsen 2004) but rather because of movment of the post-copular phrase to a clause internal FocP (a position argued for independently by Jayaseelan 1999 a.o). I provide data from Tamil scrambling facts in support of this.
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0 https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3046Testing accessibility: A cross-linguistic comparison of the syntax of referring expressions2021-02-11T18:57:43+00:00Jacopo TorregrossaChristiane BongartzIanthi Maria Tsimpli
<p>Focusing on the discourse conditions that license the use of null subjects (<em>pro</em>) in Greek and Italian, this paper shows that the distribution of referring expressions (RE, e.g., overt and null pronoun, clitic, definite description, etc.) does not only depend on the referents’ discourse status (alias accessibility). Syntactic constraints play an important role too.<strong></strong></p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2015 LSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstractshttps://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/ExtendedAbs/article/view/3016Hedging arguments2021-02-11T19:01:09+00:00Erin ZaroukianLyn Tieu
<p>Hedges such as <em>loosely speaking</em> and <em>sorta</em> indicate a mismatch between what is said and what is actually meant. As demonstrated by the example in (1), <em>sorta</em> is often used when a speaker doesn't know a more appropriate word or phrase at the time of utterance.</p><p><br />(1) I was running on concrete and accidentally sorta kicked the ground – that is to say, I didn't really kick the ground, but it was like kicking the ground. (Anderson 2014:02, ex.2)</p><p><br />In this study, we investigated the readings that arise from <em>sorta</em>-hedging. We present results indicating the possibility of hedging objects, verbs, and whole sentences, and we show that verb type, definiteness of the object, and stress on sorta all influence the availability of an object hedge reading.</p>
2015-04-13T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 0