Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization

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Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization. / Boye, Kasper; Harder, Peter.

I: Language Sciences, Bind 88, 101416, 2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Boye, K & Harder, P 2021, 'Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization', Language Sciences, bind 88, 101416. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langsci.2021.101416

APA

Boye, K., & Harder, P. (2021). Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization. Language Sciences, 88, [101416]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langsci.2021.101416

Vancouver

Boye K, Harder P. Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization. Language Sciences. 2021;88. 101416. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langsci.2021.101416

Author

Boye, Kasper ; Harder, Peter. / Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization. I: Language Sciences. 2021 ; Bind 88.

Bibtex

@article{eda798c4a28a4fa891103aeae8191283,
title = "Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization",
abstract = "The present paper aims to provide an improved understanding of the grammaticalization of parenthetical complement-taking predicates (CTPs). We point out problems in existing accounts (focusing on Boye & Harder 2007 and Brinton 1996, 2008) and propose a synthesis which incorporates the main insights of those accounts, while avoiding the problems. Based on the theory of grammatical vs. lexical status in Boye & Harder (2012), our proposal invokes as a key theoretical innovation a distinction between constructional slots for discursively secondary material, and CTP clauses as fillers of such slots. We argue that this distinction allows us to be precise not only about the status of parentheticals with respect to the grammatical vs. lexical distinction, but also about the status of sentence adverbs.Research on parentheticals and CTP clauses has been focused on constructions where the CTP clauses co-occur with clauses that are sentence-like and propositional. We broaden the scope to include constructions with clauses that are reduced and constructions that designate illocutions or states-of-affairs rather than propositions. We argue that while all CTP are structurally qualified for undergoing grammaticalization, both the syntactic and semantic type of the clauses that co-occur with them restrict grammaticalization in certain ways.While focusing on English, we regard our proposals and hypotheses as potentially applicable also to other languages. Accordingly, we include data also from other languages without however pretending that this is sufficient to actually confirm our hypotheses crosslinguistically.",
author = "Kasper Boye and Peter Harder",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.langsci.2021.101416",
language = "English",
volume = "88",
journal = "Language Sciences",
issn = "0388-0001",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Complement-taking predicates, parentheticals and grammaticalization

AU - Boye, Kasper

AU - Harder, Peter

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The present paper aims to provide an improved understanding of the grammaticalization of parenthetical complement-taking predicates (CTPs). We point out problems in existing accounts (focusing on Boye & Harder 2007 and Brinton 1996, 2008) and propose a synthesis which incorporates the main insights of those accounts, while avoiding the problems. Based on the theory of grammatical vs. lexical status in Boye & Harder (2012), our proposal invokes as a key theoretical innovation a distinction between constructional slots for discursively secondary material, and CTP clauses as fillers of such slots. We argue that this distinction allows us to be precise not only about the status of parentheticals with respect to the grammatical vs. lexical distinction, but also about the status of sentence adverbs.Research on parentheticals and CTP clauses has been focused on constructions where the CTP clauses co-occur with clauses that are sentence-like and propositional. We broaden the scope to include constructions with clauses that are reduced and constructions that designate illocutions or states-of-affairs rather than propositions. We argue that while all CTP are structurally qualified for undergoing grammaticalization, both the syntactic and semantic type of the clauses that co-occur with them restrict grammaticalization in certain ways.While focusing on English, we regard our proposals and hypotheses as potentially applicable also to other languages. Accordingly, we include data also from other languages without however pretending that this is sufficient to actually confirm our hypotheses crosslinguistically.

AB - The present paper aims to provide an improved understanding of the grammaticalization of parenthetical complement-taking predicates (CTPs). We point out problems in existing accounts (focusing on Boye & Harder 2007 and Brinton 1996, 2008) and propose a synthesis which incorporates the main insights of those accounts, while avoiding the problems. Based on the theory of grammatical vs. lexical status in Boye & Harder (2012), our proposal invokes as a key theoretical innovation a distinction between constructional slots for discursively secondary material, and CTP clauses as fillers of such slots. We argue that this distinction allows us to be precise not only about the status of parentheticals with respect to the grammatical vs. lexical distinction, but also about the status of sentence adverbs.Research on parentheticals and CTP clauses has been focused on constructions where the CTP clauses co-occur with clauses that are sentence-like and propositional. We broaden the scope to include constructions with clauses that are reduced and constructions that designate illocutions or states-of-affairs rather than propositions. We argue that while all CTP are structurally qualified for undergoing grammaticalization, both the syntactic and semantic type of the clauses that co-occur with them restrict grammaticalization in certain ways.While focusing on English, we regard our proposals and hypotheses as potentially applicable also to other languages. Accordingly, we include data also from other languages without however pretending that this is sufficient to actually confirm our hypotheses crosslinguistically.

U2 - 10.1016/j.langsci.2021.101416

DO - 10.1016/j.langsci.2021.101416

M3 - Journal article

VL - 88

JO - Language Sciences

JF - Language Sciences

SN - 0388-0001

M1 - 101416

ER -

ID: 276698954