Extending partial pro-drop in Modern Hebrew: A comprehensive analysis
Modern Hebrew is considered to be a 'partial pro-drop language'. Traditionally, the distinction between cases where pro-drop is licensed and those in which it is prohibited, was based on the person and tense features of the verb: 1st and 2nd person pronominal subjects may be omitted in pas...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the International Conference on Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar 2007-10 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Modern Hebrew is considered to be a 'partial pro-drop language'. Traditionally, the distinction
between cases where pro-drop is licensed and those in which it is prohibited, was based on the
person and tense features of the verb: 1st and 2nd person pronominal subjects may be omitted in
past and future tense. This generalization, however, was found to be false in a number of papers,
each discussing a subset of the data. Thus, contrary to conventional wisdom, dropped 3rd person
pronouns subjects do occur in the language in particular contexts.
Identifying these contexts by way of a corpus-based survey is the initial step taken in this study.
Subsequently, a careful syntactic analysis of the data reveals broad generalizations which have not
been made to date. Thus, what was initially assumed to be a uniform phenomenon of 3rd person
pro-drop turns out to be manifested in three distinct types of constructions. Finally, the proposed
HPSG-based analysis incorporates insights concerning locality, correlations between finite and non-finite
control, non-canonical elements, and binding. |
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ISSN: | 1535-1793 1535-1793 |
DOI: | 10.21248/hpsg.2007.11 |