In:Time and Again: Theoretical perspectives on formal linguistics
Edited by William D. Lewis, Simin Karimi, Heidi Harley and Scott O. Farrar
[Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 135] 2009
► pp. 91–117
4. Current challenges to the Lexicalist Hypothesis: An overview and a critique
Frederick J. Newmeyer | University of Washington, University of British Columbia, and Simon Fraser University
Published online: 8 January 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.135.07new
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.135.07new
In this chapter, arguments against several variants of the modern syntax-based analyses of deverbal nominalizations are presented, and the classic lexicalist approach deriving from Chomsky’s 1970 Remarks on nominalization is defended. The modern approaches of Alexiadou (2001), Fu, Roeper and Borer (2001), Harley and Noyer (1998), which revive in various forms the sentential Generative Semantics analyses of event nominals, are each considered and rejected in turn. In such approaches, argument-structure nominals contain some amount of verbal structure as a proper subpart. Yet, all such nominals exhibit surface syntactic patterns that resemble exactly those of nonderived nominals. The absence of verb-phrase syntax within nominalizations is a fundamental generalization about such nominals, and is very problematic for analyses which propose such substructure.
Cited by (15)
Cited by 15 other publications
Melloni, Chiara
Borer, Hagit
Iordăchioaia, Gianina & Chiara Melloni
LIEBER, ROCHELLE & INGO PLAG
Anna Papafragou, John C. Trueswell & Lila R. Gleitman
Tallman, Adam J. R.
Alexiadou, Artemis
Pross, Tillmann
O’Neill, Paul
Smirnova, Anastasia
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 14 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
