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   Breton tensed verbs show a synthetic/analytic alternation (''I.know'' vs. ''to.know I.do''),  
   Breton tensed verbs show a synthetic/analytic alternation (''I.know'' vs. ''to.know I.do''), that is not conditioned by their semantic or aspectual structure but by their syntactic environment, namely word order. Such a paradigm of verb-doubling poses a strong case against iconicity, because knowing where a verb can double requires full information about the entire derivation of the sentence. The sentence is correct if and only if the tensed element is not at the left edge of the sentence. The infinitive form of the analytic construction prevents the tensed element from occurring in the most left-edge position.
  that is not conditioned by their semantic or aspectual structure but by their syntactic  
 
  environment, namely word order. Such a paradigm of verb-doubling poses a strong case  
   This paper proposes that the analytic structure (''to.know I.do'') responds to the same trigger as expletive insertion (''expl I.know''). I claim that analytic tense formation is a last resort strategy that forms the equivalent of an expletive by excorporation of the verbal root out of the tensed complex head. The excorporated lexical verb appears fronted as an infinitive form by default. The tensed auxiliary is either realized as a dummy 'do' auxiliary (''to.know I.do''), or, for an idiosyncratic list of verbs, as the tensed reiteration of the excorporated verb itself (doubling; ''to.know I.know'')
  against iconicity, because knowing where a verb can double requires full information  
  about the entire derivation of the sentence.
  The sentence is correct if and only if the tensed element is not at the left edge of the
  sentence. The infinitive form of the analytic construction prevents the tensed element  
  from occurring in the most left-edge position.
   This paper proposes that the analytic structure (''to.know I.do'') responds to the same  
  trigger as expletive insertion (''expl I.know''). I claim that analytic tense formation is a
  last resort strategy that forms the equivalent of an expletive by excorporation of the verbal
  root out of the tensed complex head. The excorporated lexical verb appears  
  fronted as an infinitive form by default. The tensed auxiliary is either realized as a
  dummy 'do' auxiliary (''to.know I.do''), or, for an idiosyncratic list of verbs, as the  
  tensed reiteration of the excorporated verb itself (doubling; ''to.know I.know'')






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Version du 15 août 2014 à 10:17

  • Jouitteau, M. 2012a. ‘Verb doubling in Breton and Gungbe; obligatory exponence at the sentence level’, The Morphosyntax of Reiteration in Creole and Non-Creole Languages, Aboh, Enoch O., Norval Smith and Anne Zribi-Hertz (éds.), John Benjamins, 135-174.


 Breton tensed verbs show a synthetic/analytic alternation (I.know vs. to.know I.do), that is not conditioned by their semantic or aspectual structure but by their syntactic environment, namely word order. Such a paradigm of verb-doubling poses a strong case against iconicity, because knowing where a verb can double requires full information about the entire derivation of the sentence. The sentence is correct if and only if the tensed element is not at the left edge of the sentence. The infinitive form of the analytic construction prevents the tensed element from occurring in the most left-edge position.
 
 This paper proposes that the analytic structure (to.know I.do) responds to the same trigger as expletive insertion (expl I.know). I claim that analytic tense formation is a last resort strategy that forms the equivalent of an expletive by excorporation of the verbal root out of the tensed complex head. The excorporated lexical verb appears fronted as an infinitive form by default. The tensed auxiliary is either realized as a dummy 'do' auxiliary (to.know I.do), or, for an idiosyncratic list of verbs, as the tensed reiteration of the excorporated verb itself (doubling; to.know I.know)