In:Approaches to Hungarian: Volume 11: Papers from the 2007 New York Conference
Edited by Marcel den Dikken and Robert M. Vago
[Approaches to Hungarian 11] 2009
► pp. 29–64
Eliminating factivity from syntax
Sentential complements in Hungarian
Carlos de Cuba | SUNY Stony Brook and Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Barbara Ürögdi | SUNY Stony Brook and Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Published online: 19 November 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/atoh.11.03cub
https://doi.org/10.1075/atoh.11.03cub
This paper contributes to the ongoing discussion on the syntax and semantics of object clauses. Using data from Hungarian and English, we claim that ‘factivity’ is a lexico-semantic concept without a direct correlate in syntax. Instead, we propose that ‘referentiality’ is the feature that differentiates a simple [CP] (the syntactic realization of a proposition) from a more complex [cP[CP]] (encoding a speech act). We support this analysis by looking at the interpretation of sentential embedding constructions and the distribution of clausal expletives in Hungarian. Our account allows us to appeal to the referential property of CP to explain wh-extraction patterns (i.e. the ‘factive island’ effect), as well as syntactic and semantic constraints on wh-expletive constructions.
Cited by (8)
Cited by eight other publications
Booth, Hannah & Kim A. Groothuis
HAGEMANN, KRISTIN
Brandtler, Johan & Valéria Molnár
2016. Rethinking clausal asymmetries. In Inner-sentential Propositional Proforms [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, 232], ► pp. 241 ff.
Kastner, Itamar
Molnár, Valéria
2015. The Predicationality Hypothesis. In Approaches to Hungarian [Approaches to Hungarian, 14], ► pp. 209 ff.
[no author supplied]
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