Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions

We discuss conceptual and empirical arguments from Germanic, Romance and Slavic languages against an analysis treating anticausative verbs as derived from their lexical causative counterparts under reflexivization. Instead, we defend the standard account to the semantics of the causative alternation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Florian Schäfer, Margot Vivanco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2016-07-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/36
id doaj-65a8b9e470334e7eaace9c4b129bbeb1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-65a8b9e470334e7eaace9c4b129bbeb12021-09-02T03:53:13ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352016-07-011110.5334/gjgl.3619Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressionsFlorian Schäfer0Margot Vivanco1Humboldt-Universität zu BerlinUniversidad Complutense de MadridWe discuss conceptual and empirical arguments from Germanic, Romance and Slavic languages against an analysis treating anticausative verbs as derived from their lexical causative counterparts under reflexivization. Instead, we defend the standard account to the semantics of the causative alternation according to which anticausatives in general, and anticausatives marked with reflexive morphology in particular, denote simple one-place inchoative events that are logically entailed by their lexical causative counterparts. Under such an account, anticausative verbs are weak scalar expressions that stand in a semantico-pragmatic opposition to their strong lexical causative counterparts. Due to this scalar relation, the use of an anticausative can trigger the implicature that the use of its lexical causative counterpart is too strong. As usual with implicatures, they can be ‘metalinguistically’ denied, cancelled, or reinforced and we argue that these mechanisms explain all central empirical facts brought up in the literature in favor of a treatment of anticausatives as semantically reflexive predicates. Our results reinforce the view that the reflexive morphemes used in many (Indo-European) languages to mark anticausatives do not necessarily trigger reflexive semantics. However, we also show that a string involving a reflexively marked (anti-)causative verb can be forced into a semantically reflexive construal under particular conceptual or grammatical circumstances.http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/36causative alternationanticausative verbreflexive verbscalar implicature
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Florian Schäfer
Margot Vivanco
spellingShingle Florian Schäfer
Margot Vivanco
Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions
Glossa
causative alternation
anticausative verb
reflexive verb
scalar implicature
author_facet Florian Schäfer
Margot Vivanco
author_sort Florian Schäfer
title Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions
title_short Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions
title_full Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions
title_fullStr Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions
title_full_unstemmed Anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions
title_sort anticausatives are weak scalar expressions, not reflexive expressions
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2016-07-01
description We discuss conceptual and empirical arguments from Germanic, Romance and Slavic languages against an analysis treating anticausative verbs as derived from their lexical causative counterparts under reflexivization. Instead, we defend the standard account to the semantics of the causative alternation according to which anticausatives in general, and anticausatives marked with reflexive morphology in particular, denote simple one-place inchoative events that are logically entailed by their lexical causative counterparts. Under such an account, anticausative verbs are weak scalar expressions that stand in a semantico-pragmatic opposition to their strong lexical causative counterparts. Due to this scalar relation, the use of an anticausative can trigger the implicature that the use of its lexical causative counterpart is too strong. As usual with implicatures, they can be ‘metalinguistically’ denied, cancelled, or reinforced and we argue that these mechanisms explain all central empirical facts brought up in the literature in favor of a treatment of anticausatives as semantically reflexive predicates. Our results reinforce the view that the reflexive morphemes used in many (Indo-European) languages to mark anticausatives do not necessarily trigger reflexive semantics. However, we also show that a string involving a reflexively marked (anti-)causative verb can be forced into a semantically reflexive construal under particular conceptual or grammatical circumstances.
topic causative alternation
anticausative verb
reflexive verb
scalar implicature
url http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/36
work_keys_str_mv AT florianschafer anticausativesareweakscalarexpressionsnotreflexiveexpressions
AT margotvivanco anticausativesareweakscalarexpressionsnotreflexiveexpressions
_version_ 1721180574223171584