What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge

We focus here on the “classic” EPP, the requirement that certain subject positions be filled, and argue that characterizing it in terms of a syntactic movement-triggering feature is misguided. Specifically, we argue that, contrary to standard assumptions but along the lines of some recent proposals,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomas McFadden, Sandhya Sundaresan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2018-04-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
EPP
Online Access:https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/419
id doaj-f1e34b2ee0be41adaeb8570b1ab03e5e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f1e34b2ee0be41adaeb8570b1ab03e5e2021-09-02T10:56:36ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352018-04-013110.5334/gjgl.419206What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edgeThomas McFadden0Sandhya Sundaresan1Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Schu¨tzenstr. 18, 10117 BerlinUniversität Leipzig, Beethovenstr. 15, 04107 LeipzigWe focus here on the “classic” EPP, the requirement that certain subject positions be filled, and argue that characterizing it in terms of a syntactic movement-triggering feature is misguided. Specifically, we argue that, contrary to standard assumptions but along the lines of some recent proposals, the factors conditioning the EPP are actually not syntactic, but phonological. Nonetheless, the operations that it seems to trigger clearly are syntactic. Under common assumptions about the architecture of the grammar, the EPP thus seems to involve a violation of modularity or strict cyclicity. A novel approach to the EPP is thus required, which must simultaneously be able to handle its unique properties but must also be made to fit in with the broader grammatical architecture. We will argue that such an approach will not only allow a more satisfactory account of the EPP itself, but can also yield a unification with the comp-trace effect and yield insight into how both of these interact with pro-drop.https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/419EPP(anti-)that-trace effectpro-dropcomplementizersprosodyphasesphasal domainspelloutintonation phrasesyntax-PF interface
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas McFadden
Sandhya Sundaresan
spellingShingle Thomas McFadden
Sandhya Sundaresan
What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge
Glossa
EPP
(anti-)that-trace effect
pro-drop
complementizers
prosody
phases
phasal domain
spellout
intonation phrase
syntax-PF interface
author_facet Thomas McFadden
Sandhya Sundaresan
author_sort Thomas McFadden
title What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge
title_short What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge
title_full What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge
title_fullStr What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge
title_full_unstemmed What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge
title_sort what the epp and comp-trace effects have in common: constraining silent elements at the edge
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2018-04-01
description We focus here on the “classic” EPP, the requirement that certain subject positions be filled, and argue that characterizing it in terms of a syntactic movement-triggering feature is misguided. Specifically, we argue that, contrary to standard assumptions but along the lines of some recent proposals, the factors conditioning the EPP are actually not syntactic, but phonological. Nonetheless, the operations that it seems to trigger clearly are syntactic. Under common assumptions about the architecture of the grammar, the EPP thus seems to involve a violation of modularity or strict cyclicity. A novel approach to the EPP is thus required, which must simultaneously be able to handle its unique properties but must also be made to fit in with the broader grammatical architecture. We will argue that such an approach will not only allow a more satisfactory account of the EPP itself, but can also yield a unification with the comp-trace effect and yield insight into how both of these interact with pro-drop.
topic EPP
(anti-)that-trace effect
pro-drop
complementizers
prosody
phases
phasal domain
spellout
intonation phrase
syntax-PF interface
url https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/419
work_keys_str_mv AT thomasmcfadden whattheeppandcomptraceeffectshaveincommonconstrainingsilentelementsattheedge
AT sandhyasundaresan whattheeppandcomptraceeffectshaveincommonconstrainingsilentelementsattheedge
_version_ 1721176252421767168