Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations

According to Chomsky (1970), raising to subject and raising to object may not take place inside nominalizations. This claim has largely been accepted as fact ever since. For instance, Newmeyer (2009) repeats the claim as crucial evidence for the Lexicalist Hypothesis, the view that word formation ta...

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Main Author: Benjamin T. Bruening
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2018-09-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/470
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spelling doaj-1bcc3d5746f84e7facdfcd29c66ff2e42021-09-02T09:25:28ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352018-09-013110.5334/gjgl.470267Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizationsBenjamin T. Bruening0University of Delaware, 125 E. Main Street, Newark DE 19716According to Chomsky (1970), raising to subject and raising to object may not take place inside nominalizations. This claim has largely been accepted as fact ever since. For instance, Newmeyer (2009) repeats the claim as crucial evidence for the Lexicalist Hypothesis, the view that word formation takes place in a component of the grammar separate from the phrasal syntax. This paper shows with attested examples and survey data that the claim is false: raising to subject and raising to object are both grammatical inside nominalizations. This argues for a purely syntactic model of word formation, and against Lexicalist accounts. Additionally, the paper shows that one argument against syntactic accounts of nominalization, that from coordination, does not go through, clearing the way for the most parsimonious type of theory: one with only one combinatorial component, not two distinct ones for phrases versus words.https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/470syntactic word formationraisingnominalizationthe Lexicalist Hypothesisexperimental syntax
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin T. Bruening
spellingShingle Benjamin T. Bruening
Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations
Glossa
syntactic word formation
raising
nominalization
the Lexicalist Hypothesis
experimental syntax
author_facet Benjamin T. Bruening
author_sort Benjamin T. Bruening
title Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations
title_short Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations
title_full Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations
title_fullStr Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations
title_full_unstemmed Word formation is syntactic: Raising in nominalizations
title_sort word formation is syntactic: raising in nominalizations
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2018-09-01
description According to Chomsky (1970), raising to subject and raising to object may not take place inside nominalizations. This claim has largely been accepted as fact ever since. For instance, Newmeyer (2009) repeats the claim as crucial evidence for the Lexicalist Hypothesis, the view that word formation takes place in a component of the grammar separate from the phrasal syntax. This paper shows with attested examples and survey data that the claim is false: raising to subject and raising to object are both grammatical inside nominalizations. This argues for a purely syntactic model of word formation, and against Lexicalist accounts. Additionally, the paper shows that one argument against syntactic accounts of nominalization, that from coordination, does not go through, clearing the way for the most parsimonious type of theory: one with only one combinatorial component, not two distinct ones for phrases versus words.
topic syntactic word formation
raising
nominalization
the Lexicalist Hypothesis
experimental syntax
url https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/470
work_keys_str_mv AT benjamintbruening wordformationissyntacticraisinginnominalizations
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