The Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP Periphery

This thesis investigates the functional categories in the vP domain, including aspect, modality, and focus. For this research initiative, five constructions were examined: the Mandarin temporal adverbial, the Mandarin excessive ta, the Mandarin de/bu, the Turkish question particle –mI, and the Armen...

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Main Author: Su, Yu-Ying Julia
Other Authors: Massam, Diane
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34934
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-349342013-04-19T19:58:37ZThe Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP PeripherySu, Yu-Ying Juliafunctional categoriesleft peripheryAgree0290This thesis investigates the functional categories in the vP domain, including aspect, modality, and focus. For this research initiative, five constructions were examined: the Mandarin temporal adverbial, the Mandarin excessive ta, the Mandarin de/bu, the Turkish question particle –mI, and the Armenian auxiliary constructions. These constructions involve functional categories that are expected to appear at the C/IP periphery; however, they surface inside the vP domain. The existence of these low grammatical elements raises non-trivial questions such as how functional categories should be mapped out in the structure, and whether a unified structure can be proposed to account for the cross-linguistic phenomena examined in this thesis. The investigation of these constructions showed that there are cross-domain interactions between low and high functional categories. While Mandarin temporal adverbial constructions showed interactions between viewpoint aspect and lexical aspect via the distributions of the temporal adverbials and various co-occurrence restrictions, the other four constructions demonstrated interactions between the low and the high categories via intervention effects. I argue that low functional categories must be licensed by their counterparts in the C/IP domain, and that the licensing relation and the structural conditions imposed on this relation can be captured if an Agree relation is established between the functional categories in these two domains. The analysis also reveals that low functional categories are the result of feature lowering from v* to some functional projection below it, and the formal features of the low functional categories must assign their values to their counterparts in the C/IP domain via Agree to provide a meaningful input to LF. I propose a parallel analysis between CP and vP to account for the existence of the low grammatical elements in two respects: (1) C and *v, as phase heads, have an edge feature (EPP) and Agree features that need to be valued and/or checked at a functional projection lower than the each phase head; (2) the formal features of C can appear at *v if they are licensed by an associate feature present in the C/T domain for the purpose of Full Interpretation (Chomsky 1995, 2000).Massam, Diane2012-112013-01-07T19:47:07ZNO_RESTRICTION2013-01-07T19:47:07Z2013-01-07Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/34934en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic functional categories
left periphery
Agree
0290
spellingShingle functional categories
left periphery
Agree
0290
Su, Yu-Ying Julia
The Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP Periphery
description This thesis investigates the functional categories in the vP domain, including aspect, modality, and focus. For this research initiative, five constructions were examined: the Mandarin temporal adverbial, the Mandarin excessive ta, the Mandarin de/bu, the Turkish question particle –mI, and the Armenian auxiliary constructions. These constructions involve functional categories that are expected to appear at the C/IP periphery; however, they surface inside the vP domain. The existence of these low grammatical elements raises non-trivial questions such as how functional categories should be mapped out in the structure, and whether a unified structure can be proposed to account for the cross-linguistic phenomena examined in this thesis. The investigation of these constructions showed that there are cross-domain interactions between low and high functional categories. While Mandarin temporal adverbial constructions showed interactions between viewpoint aspect and lexical aspect via the distributions of the temporal adverbials and various co-occurrence restrictions, the other four constructions demonstrated interactions between the low and the high categories via intervention effects. I argue that low functional categories must be licensed by their counterparts in the C/IP domain, and that the licensing relation and the structural conditions imposed on this relation can be captured if an Agree relation is established between the functional categories in these two domains. The analysis also reveals that low functional categories are the result of feature lowering from v* to some functional projection below it, and the formal features of the low functional categories must assign their values to their counterparts in the C/IP domain via Agree to provide a meaningful input to LF. I propose a parallel analysis between CP and vP to account for the existence of the low grammatical elements in two respects: (1) C and *v, as phase heads, have an edge feature (EPP) and Agree features that need to be valued and/or checked at a functional projection lower than the each phase head; (2) the formal features of C can appear at *v if they are licensed by an associate feature present in the C/T domain for the purpose of Full Interpretation (Chomsky 1995, 2000).
author2 Massam, Diane
author_facet Massam, Diane
Su, Yu-Ying Julia
author Su, Yu-Ying Julia
author_sort Su, Yu-Ying Julia
title The Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP Periphery
title_short The Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP Periphery
title_full The Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP Periphery
title_fullStr The Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP Periphery
title_full_unstemmed The Syntax of Functional Projections in the vP Periphery
title_sort syntax of functional projections in the vp periphery
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34934
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