Austronesian verb-initial languages and wh -question strategies

This paper presents a research agenda for investigating possible implicational universals connecting the syntactic strategy that a verb-initial language uses to derive verb-initial word order (verb raising, VP raising, verb lowering, right hand subjects, etc.) and its strategy for forming w/j-questi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Natural language and linguistic theory 2009-11, Vol.27 (4), p.737-771
1. Verfasser: Potsdam, Eric
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper presents a research agenda for investigating possible implicational universals connecting the syntactic strategy that a verb-initial language uses to derive verb-initial word order (verb raising, VP raising, verb lowering, right hand subjects, etc.) and its strategy for forming w/j-questions (wh-in-situ, clefting, wh-fronting, etc.). The Austronesian language family, with its over 1000 members, is taken as a starting point for the investigation because of its abundance of verb-initial languages. The existing analyses of Austronesian languages support one potential universal in this domain: Languages that derive verb-initial word order by VP raising do not have w/z-movement. Possible theoretical explanations for this pattern are evaluated.The paper then considers Fijian, a potential counterexample. Further analysis suggests that Fijian is unlikely to be a problem, however, it highlights a main claim of the paper: Careful, in-depth analyses are required to yield robust results in such a typological study.
ISSN:0167-806X
1573-0859
DOI:10.1007/s11049-009-9078-0