The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent Dialect

The goal of our paper is to provide a description of an apparent V3 pattern which is salient with some speakers of the Ghent dialect, illustrated in (1), from Vanacker (1980).Vroeger, die bakten wij vier soorten brood     formerly die baked  we four sorts    bread     “We used to bake four kinds of...

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Main Authors: Karen De Clercq, Liliane Haegeman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
V3
V2
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01342/full
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spelling doaj-bdd387842b4c44329ac6980eea921eb72020-11-25T02:28:28ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782018-08-01910.3389/fpsyg.2018.01342344633The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent DialectKaren De Clercq0Karen De Clercq1Liliane Haegeman2DIALING, Department of Linguistics, Ghent University, Ghent, BelgiumFWO, Department of Linguistics, Ghent University, Ghent, BelgiumDIALING, Department of Linguistics, Ghent University, Ghent, BelgiumThe goal of our paper is to provide a description of an apparent V3 pattern which is salient with some speakers of the Ghent dialect, illustrated in (1), from Vanacker (1980).Vroeger, die bakten wij vier soorten brood     formerly die baked  we four sorts    bread     “We used to bake four kinds of bread.” (Gijzenzele 0.28) (Vanacker, 1980, p. 76)In such examples, what would be an initial adverbial constituent in the root clause vroeger, (“formerly”) is separated from the finite verb by what Vanacker (1980) labels a “pleonastic” element, die, in effect leading to a superficial V3 order. At first sight, this element die is optional and it has no impact on the truth conditions of the proposition that it introduces. (2) is also acceptable in the dialect.(2) Vroeger bakten wij vier soorten brood.      formerly baked we four sorts    bread      “We used to bake four kinds of bread.”In the first part of the paper, we will provide a description of the distribution of die. We will also compare its distribution with that of the more widely distributed resumptive adverbs dan (“then”) and daar (“there”), which are typical of the Germanic V2 languages (Salvesen, 2016). Our account will be based both on authentic data drawn from corpora and from anecdotal observations as well as on the results of elicitations with 10 native speakers of the dialect. In the second part of the paper we provide an analysis in terms of Wolfe's (2016) typology of the syntax of V2. Adopting the articulated structure of CP as elaborated in the cartographic framework, we will propose that die is an overt spell out of the head Force and as such a root complementiser.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01342/fullV3V2cartographycomplementizersFlemishGhent
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karen De Clercq
Karen De Clercq
Liliane Haegeman
spellingShingle Karen De Clercq
Karen De Clercq
Liliane Haegeman
The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent Dialect
Frontiers in Psychology
V3
V2
cartography
complementizers
Flemish
Ghent
author_facet Karen De Clercq
Karen De Clercq
Liliane Haegeman
author_sort Karen De Clercq
title The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent Dialect
title_short The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent Dialect
title_full The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent Dialect
title_fullStr The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent Dialect
title_full_unstemmed The Typology of V2 and the Distribution of Pleonastic die in the Ghent Dialect
title_sort typology of v2 and the distribution of pleonastic die in the ghent dialect
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2018-08-01
description The goal of our paper is to provide a description of an apparent V3 pattern which is salient with some speakers of the Ghent dialect, illustrated in (1), from Vanacker (1980).Vroeger, die bakten wij vier soorten brood     formerly die baked  we four sorts    bread     “We used to bake four kinds of bread.” (Gijzenzele 0.28) (Vanacker, 1980, p. 76)In such examples, what would be an initial adverbial constituent in the root clause vroeger, (“formerly”) is separated from the finite verb by what Vanacker (1980) labels a “pleonastic” element, die, in effect leading to a superficial V3 order. At first sight, this element die is optional and it has no impact on the truth conditions of the proposition that it introduces. (2) is also acceptable in the dialect.(2) Vroeger bakten wij vier soorten brood.      formerly baked we four sorts    bread      “We used to bake four kinds of bread.”In the first part of the paper, we will provide a description of the distribution of die. We will also compare its distribution with that of the more widely distributed resumptive adverbs dan (“then”) and daar (“there”), which are typical of the Germanic V2 languages (Salvesen, 2016). Our account will be based both on authentic data drawn from corpora and from anecdotal observations as well as on the results of elicitations with 10 native speakers of the dialect. In the second part of the paper we provide an analysis in terms of Wolfe's (2016) typology of the syntax of V2. Adopting the articulated structure of CP as elaborated in the cartographic framework, we will propose that die is an overt spell out of the head Force and as such a root complementiser.
topic V3
V2
cartography
complementizers
Flemish
Ghent
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01342/full
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