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The morphological dimension of polarity licensing
Author(s)
Date Issued
2002
Date Available
2013-03-14T17:43:12Z
Abstract
Polarity items must, by definition, fit inside the scope of their licenser; items like any N, in addition, appear to require a c-commanding and overt licenser. It is argued that the relevant restriction refers to precedence, not e-command, and that it is morphological, not syntactic. This implies a morphological dimension of dependence, in addition to the semantic, syntactic, and pragmatic ones. The analysis relies on the separation between syntax and a postsyntactic morphological component: the exponents of the relevant polarity items require an [operator] feature that never appears in the corresponding feature bundle at the output of syntax. This mismatch is resolved by copying the feature from the licensing operator, provided it is present at morphological structure (overt) and linearly preceding.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
De Gruyter
Journal
Linguistics
Volume
40
Issue
5
Start Page
925
End Page
959
Copyright (Published Version)
2006, Walter De Gruyter
Subjects
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0024-3949
1613-396X
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
linguistics_II.pdf
Size
200 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
76b3c8e352ce1eac1b126d2b505305b5
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