The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in German

This paper studies the morpho-syntax of proper names like 'die Deutsche Bank' ‘the German Bank’ in German. Semantically, these types of proper names, called phrasal proper names here, refer to entities but have descriptive meaning. Lexically, they are frozen and morpho-syntactically, they...

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Main Author: Dorian Roehrs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2020-12-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
dp
Online Access:https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/1267
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spelling doaj-2832a24fbfcd4c288e53f4b958ff069c2021-09-02T20:51:36ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352020-12-015110.5334/gjgl.1267581The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in GermanDorian Roehrs0University of North Texas, Department of World Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, DentonThis paper studies the morpho-syntax of proper names like 'die Deutsche Bank' ‘the German Bank’ in German. Semantically, these types of proper names, called phrasal proper names here, refer to entities but have descriptive meaning. Lexically, they are frozen and morpho-syntactically, they are frozen or transparent depending on the phenomenon. To capture these hybrid properties, it is proposed that regular vocabulary items are taken from the lexicon, that these individual elements receive each a referential marker (i.e., an index), and that they are stored as a set in the lexicon. Second, these indexed elements build a regular structure during the syntactic derivation projecting the marker to the entire structure. As is clear from proper names in Italian, certain syntactic operations are sensitive to these markers. As a consequence, these operations cannot single out the individual parts (but only the entire structure). Regular vocabulary items and an ordinary derivation explain the transparent properties; the addition of referential markers accounts for the referentiality and the frozen characteristics. The optional presence of non-restrictive modifiers shows that these nominal structures can be quite complex. Given this discussion, it seems unlikely that the referentiality of phrasal proper names is located in the DP-level.https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/1267morpho-syntaxdpproper namesgermanreferentiality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dorian Roehrs
spellingShingle Dorian Roehrs
The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in German
Glossa
morpho-syntax
dp
proper names
german
referentiality
author_facet Dorian Roehrs
author_sort Dorian Roehrs
title The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in German
title_short The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in German
title_full The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in German
title_fullStr The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in German
title_full_unstemmed The morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in German
title_sort morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names in german
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This paper studies the morpho-syntax of proper names like 'die Deutsche Bank' ‘the German Bank’ in German. Semantically, these types of proper names, called phrasal proper names here, refer to entities but have descriptive meaning. Lexically, they are frozen and morpho-syntactically, they are frozen or transparent depending on the phenomenon. To capture these hybrid properties, it is proposed that regular vocabulary items are taken from the lexicon, that these individual elements receive each a referential marker (i.e., an index), and that they are stored as a set in the lexicon. Second, these indexed elements build a regular structure during the syntactic derivation projecting the marker to the entire structure. As is clear from proper names in Italian, certain syntactic operations are sensitive to these markers. As a consequence, these operations cannot single out the individual parts (but only the entire structure). Regular vocabulary items and an ordinary derivation explain the transparent properties; the addition of referential markers accounts for the referentiality and the frozen characteristics. The optional presence of non-restrictive modifiers shows that these nominal structures can be quite complex. Given this discussion, it seems unlikely that the referentiality of phrasal proper names is located in the DP-level.
topic morpho-syntax
dp
proper names
german
referentiality
url https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/1267
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