In:Current Issues in Syntactic Cartography: A crosslinguistic perspective
Edited by Fuzhen Si and Luigi Rizzi
[Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 267] 2021
► pp. 127–138
Chapter 6Subject drop in how come questions in
English
Published online: 12 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.267.06end
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.267.06end
Abstract
In this paper, I will discuss a novel phenomenon
which has not previously been discussed in the literature on
how come questions – namely the fact that they
can exhibit subject drop in diary-style English. I will first
introduce Haegeman’s
(1990) analysis of diary English with special attention
to subject drop. I will next show some facts that how
come questions can exhibit subject drop in diary-style
English and suggest a mechanism responsible for subject drop in
diary English. It will be shown that the same mechanism is used to
license the null subject in Old English. I will further deal with a
related but distinct question about the mechanism licensing an
argumental element in the lower topic position in Old English, as
opposed to Late Middle English. I will finally show that the same
mechanism responsible for subject drop is used in licensing null
Case in Japanese.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Subject drop in how come questions in diary English
- 3.Null Case particle in Japanese
- 4.Summary
Acknowledgements Notes References Appendix
References (38)
Belletti, Adriana. 2001. “Inversion” as focalization. In Subject Inversion in Romance and the Theory of Universal
Grammar, Aafke C. J. Hulk & Jean-Yves Pollock (eds), 60–90, Oxford: OUP.
. 2004. Aspects of the low IP area. In The Structure of IP and CP: The Cartography of Syntactic
Structures, Vol. 2, Luigi Rizzi (ed.), 16–51. Oxford: OUP.
Coniglio, Marco. 2014. The fine structure of force: On the interaction
of modal particles with illocutionary force and clause
type. In On Peripheries: Exploring Clause Initial and Clause
Final Positions, Anna Cardinaletti, Guglielmo Cinque & Yoshio Endo (eds), 103–140. Tokyo: Hituzi.
Coniglio, Marco & Zegrean, Iulia. 2012. Splitting up force. Evidence from discourse
particles. In Main Clause Phenomena: New Horizons [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 190], Lobke Aelbrecht, Liliane Haegeman & Rachael Nye (eds), 229–255. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Culicover, Peter. 1991. Topicalization, inversion and complementizers in English. In Going Romance and Beyond, Denis Delfitto, Martin Everaert, Arnold Evers & Frits Stuurman (eds), 1–45. Utrecht: University of Utrecht.
Dohi, Atsushi. 2020. CP-internal discourse particles and the split ForceP hypothesis. Lingua 233. 68–87.
Endo, Yoshio. 2007. Locality and Information Structure. A Cartographic
Approach to Japanese [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 116]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
. 2012. Illocutionary force and modal particles in the
syntax of Japanese. In Theory of Mind Elements across Languages, Werner Abraham & Elisabeth Leiss (eds), 405–424. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
. 2017. Inter-speaker variation and subject drop in
how come questions in
English. The Syntax-Morphology Interface in Generative Grammar:
Proceedings of the 19th Seoul International Conference on
Generative Grammar, 99–114. Seoul: The Korean Generative Grammar Circle.
. 2018. Variation in wh-expressions asking for a
reason. Special issue on Complementizers: Lexical vs. Functional
Variation of Linguistic Variation 18(2): 299–314.
. 2020. Information structure, null case particle and
sentence final discourse particle. In Discourse Particles and Information Structure [Studies in Language Companion Series 213], Olivier Duplâtre & Pierre-Yves Modicom (eds), 224–250. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Endo, Yoshio & Haegeman, Liliane. 2014. Adverbial concord merging adverbial
clauses. In Proceedings of FAJL 7: Formal Approaches to Japanese
Linguistics [MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 73], Shigeto Kawahara & Mika Igarashi (eds), 25–44. Cambridge MA: MITWPL.
. 2019. Adverbial clauses and adverbial
concord. In special collection on the Syntax of Adverbial Clauses of
Glossa 4(1): 48, 1–32.
Fitzpatrick, Justin. 2005. The whys and how comes of presupposition and NPI
licensing in questions. In John Alderete, Chung-hye Han & Alexei Kochetov (eds), Proceedings of the 24th West Coast Conference on Formal
Linguistics, 138–145. Somerville MA: Cascadilla Press.
Haegeman, Liliane. 1990. Understood subjects in English diaries: On the
relevance of theoretical syntax for the study of register
variation. Multilingua 9: 157–199.
. 2013. The syntax of registers: Diary subject omission
and the privilege of the root. Lingua 130: 88–110.
. 2017. Unspeakable sentences. Subject omission in
written registers: A cartographic analysis. Special issue on Register Variation and Syntactic
Theory, Diane Massam & Tim Stowell (eds), of Linguistic Variation 17(2): 229–250.
Haegeman, Liliane & Stark, Elisabeth. 2021. Register-specific subject omission in English and
French and the syntax of coordination. In Germanic and Romance: Continuity and Variation, Sam Wolfe & Christine Mecklenborg Salvesen (eds). Oxford: OUP.
van Kemenade, Ans. 1987. Syntactic Case and Morphological Case in the History of English. Foris, Dordrecht.
Kiss, Katalin É. 1995. Introduction. In Discourse Configurational Languages, Katalin É. Kiss (ed.), 3–27. Oxford: OUP.
Krifka, Manfed. 2017. Assertions and judgements, epistemics and
evidentials. Paper presented at the Workshop Speech Acts: Meanings, Uses, Syntactic and
Prosodic Realizations, Leibniz-ZAS Berlin, 29–31 May. <[URL]> (26 January 2021).
Masunaga, Kiyoko. 1988. Case deletion and discourse
context. In Papers from the Second International Workshop on
Japanese Syntax, William Poser (ed.), 145–156. Stanford CA: CSLI.
Miyagawa, Shigeru. 2010. Why Agree? Why Move? Unifying Agreement-Based and
Discourse Configurational Languages, Cambridge MA: The MIT Press.
Nawata, Hiroyuki. 2009. Clausal architecture and inflectional paradigm:
The case of V2 in the history of English. English Linguistics 26: 247–283.
Rizzi, Luigi. 1997. The fine structure of the left
periphery. In Elements of Grammar: Handbook of Generative
Syntax, Liliane Haegeman (ed.), 281–337. Dordrecht: Kluwer.
. 2001. On the position of ‘int(errogative)’ in the left
periphery of the clause. In Current Studies in Italian Syntax, Guglielmo Cinque & Giampaolo Salvi (eds), 267–296. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
. 2004. Locality and left periphery. In Structures and Beyond, Adriana Belletti (ed.), 223–251. Oxford: OUP.
. 2006. On the form of chains: Criterial positions and
ECP effects. In Wh-Movement. Moving On, Lisa Cheng & Norbert Corver (eds), 97–133. Cambridge MA: The MIT Press.
. 2014. Some consequences of criterial freezing:
Asymmetries, anti-adjacency and extraction from cleft
sentences. In Functional Structure from Top to Toe, Peter Svenonius (ed.), 19–54. Oxford: OUP.
Rizzi, Luigi & Shlonsky, Ur. 2007. Strategies of subject extraction. In Interfaces + Recursion = Language? Chomsky’s Minimalism
and the View from Syntax-Semantics, Uli Sauerland & Hans-Martin Gärtner (eds), 115–160. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Tanaka, Tomoyuki. 2017. Eigosi-niokeru
Kinoohantyuu-no Syutugen to Syoositu (The emergence and loss of functional
categories in the history of English). Paper presented at the symposium of the English Literary Society of Japan
held at Shizuoka University, Japan.
