Article published In: Current trends in analyzing syntactic variation:
Edited by Ludovic De Cuypere, Clara Vanderschueren and Gert de Sutter
[Belgian Journal of Linguistics 31] 2017
► pp. 104–136
Expanding the causative alternation
What about a third variant?
Eugenia Mangialavori Rasia | National Scientific and Technical Research Council – CONICET | rasia@inv.rosario-conicet.gov.ar
Published online: 23 April 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/bjl.00005.man
https://doi.org/10.1075/bjl.00005.man
Abstract
The causative-inchoative alternation has been a subject of much debate. It might also be a case where variation patterns that escape
existing typological descriptions provide a new perspective on the problem. We analyze the variability and systematicity of alternative
argument structure realizations, together with corresponding aspectual/event properties, by considering three different ways in which
change-of-state verbs can be semantically and syntactically construed in Romance. Under the general assumption that the syntactic projection
of arguments correlates non-trivially with event structure, we apply a novel theoretical approach to the semantics and syntax of the
causative-inchoative alternation. We argue that different verbal heads can be independently combined to yield contrasting verbal
configurations, with corresponding event/argument structure properties quite freely. Alongside standard cases such as causative and
inchoative frames, we discuss what we call ‘stative-causative constructions’ [SCC], where the initiator appears as the sole argument. The
general properties of this additional (third) variant suggest the availability of a null causative (external-argument-selecting)
v0 producing original monoargumental structures with corresponding (simpler) event structure. These little-known Spanish data
challenge current argument structure theories assuming that the causative v0 necessarily implicates the eventive (BECOME)
component, or that the latter figures in the verb’s permanent lexical entry. SCCs provide empirical evidence suggesting that what is
commonly described as a basic unaccusative/transitive verb may have unergative uses.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 1.1The problem: Alternatives in the causative alternation
- 1.2The proposal: New (theoretical) ways of analyzing syntactic variation
- 2.Preliminary empirical observations: Implicit arguments and composite roles
- 3.Defining the general approach
- 4.Backdrop: Event and argument structure
- 5.Further points of data: Event composition and argument structure
- 5.1Event structure, process and telicity
- 5.2Non-eventivity
- 6.Preliminary analysis: The ontology of VINIT/CAUS
- 7.An alternative proposal: V-flavors
- 8.Conclusions
- Notes
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