The English Middle and Inchoative

I will show that the evidence advanced by syntactic approaches to the English middle holds also for some inchoative clauses. Most approaches to the English middle and inchoative, whether syntactic or lexical, define the middle as implying an arbitrary agent and the inchoative as not. This definition...

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Main Author: Sohn, Joong-Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas, Department of Linguistics 1998-01-01
Series:Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1808/338
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spelling doaj-10b0753e2a4643e3b660aafa8202dd442020-11-25T01:21:15ZengUniversity of Kansas, Department of LinguisticsKansas Working Papers in Linguistics2378-76001998-01-0123111513410.17161/KWPL.1808.338The English Middle and Inchoative Sohn, Joong-SunI will show that the evidence advanced by syntactic approaches to the English middle holds also for some inchoative clauses. Most approaches to the English middle and inchoative, whether syntactic or lexical, define the middle as implying an arbitrary agent and the inchoative as not. This definition will bring about a group of clauses which imply a non-arbitrary agent and thus may not belong to either category. I will show that the agent implication involved in the middle comes from pragmatic effects based on the generic property reading of the clause and the lexical conceptual structure. The major difference between the middle and inchoative is related to event structure: a generic property vs. event reading respectively. That is, the two constructions are two subtypes of the unaccusative. The theory of arb in various disguises turns out to he unnecessary. http://hdl.handle.net/1808/338English language-- Middle English, 1100-1500-- Syntax
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sohn, Joong-Sun
spellingShingle Sohn, Joong-Sun
The English Middle and Inchoative
Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
English language-- Middle English, 1100-1500-- Syntax
author_facet Sohn, Joong-Sun
author_sort Sohn, Joong-Sun
title The English Middle and Inchoative
title_short The English Middle and Inchoative
title_full The English Middle and Inchoative
title_fullStr The English Middle and Inchoative
title_full_unstemmed The English Middle and Inchoative
title_sort english middle and inchoative
publisher University of Kansas, Department of Linguistics
series Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
issn 2378-7600
publishDate 1998-01-01
description I will show that the evidence advanced by syntactic approaches to the English middle holds also for some inchoative clauses. Most approaches to the English middle and inchoative, whether syntactic or lexical, define the middle as implying an arbitrary agent and the inchoative as not. This definition will bring about a group of clauses which imply a non-arbitrary agent and thus may not belong to either category. I will show that the agent implication involved in the middle comes from pragmatic effects based on the generic property reading of the clause and the lexical conceptual structure. The major difference between the middle and inchoative is related to event structure: a generic property vs. event reading respectively. That is, the two constructions are two subtypes of the unaccusative. The theory of arb in various disguises turns out to he unnecessary.
topic English language-- Middle English, 1100-1500-- Syntax
url http://hdl.handle.net/1808/338
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