Syntax 1 Wiki: Week 7
Topicalization and Wh-movement
(1)
a. Kim likes Robin.
b. Robin, Kim likes __.
(2)
a. Kim depends on Robin.
b. Robin, Kim depends on __.
(3)
a. Kim depends on Robin.
b. On Robin, Kim depends __.
(4)
a. Kim is fond of Robin.
b. Robin, Kim is fond of __.
(5)
a. Kim showed me a picture of Robin.
b. Robin, Kim showed me a picture of __.
(6)
a. Kim said I like Robin.
b. Robin, Kim said I like __.
(7)
a. Kim said I claimed she likes Robin.
b. Robin, Kim said I claimed she likes __.
Because preposing can in principle span arbitrarily many clauses, it is one example of a long distance dependency!
(8) * Robin, Kim smokes __.
(9) * To Robin, Kim likes __.
(10) * She, Kim likes __.
(11) * To Robin, Kim depends __.
(12) * Robin, Kim claims __ am sad.
Generalization: An expression can be preposed from a position P if and only if it can also occur in position P itself!
The definition of the gap
This means the following:
- The gap is phonologically silent.
- The gap is like a joker card: since it is syntactically maximally unspecific, it can stand in for any sign whatsoever.
- The syntactic category of the gap also appears as the sole element on its gap list.
We distinguish between two kinds of phrases:
1. Stand(ard) phrases: hd-comp-ph, hd-spr-ph, hd-c-ph, sai-ph
2. Head-Filler phrases: top-ph, question
Remarks:
1. ⊕ is the list merger operator.
2. L1 ⊕ L2 is the new list L3 which contains all the elements of list L1 followed by all the elements of list L2.
Examples:
1. <> ⊕ < a > = < a >
2. < a > ⊕ <> = < a >
3. < a, a > ⊕ < a, b, c > = < a, a, a, b, c >