In:Current Issues in Syntactic Cartography: A crosslinguistic perspective
Edited by Fuzhen Si and Luigi Rizzi
[Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 267] 2021
► pp. 217–242
Chapter 10Towards a cartography of light verbs
Published online: 12 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.267.10si
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.267.10si
Abstract
A common goal shared by cartographic studies is
“to draw maps as precise and detailed as possible of syntactic
configurations” (Cinque &
Rizzi 2008). In the past two decades, a great progress
has been made in the study of peripheries of different domains such
as CP domain, VP domain and DP domain. The “more precise and
detailed” cartographic research goal enables us to rethink those
projections which believed to be single projections in earlier
theoretical models. A rich literature on peripheries have shown that
many of these superficial single projections are actually
abbreviations of much richer structural zones. For instance, the C
layer is split into Topic and Focus components (Rizzi 1997; Rizzi &
Bocci 2017) and Topic and Focus themselves are also conceived as
Topic “field” and Focus “field” (Benincà & Poletto 2004), encoding different and
hierarchically arranged topic elements or focus elements. Similarly,
this chapter suggests that “light verb” can also be further analyzed
as a “light verb field”, containing several layers of different
light verbs, conveying different information. Following this
tradition, also in light of Larson (1988, 2014), Harley
(2002), and Benincà
& Poletto (2004), the present chapter provides a
zoom-in/zoom-out mental magnifier for the study of various light
verb structures. One major assumption and two subsequent assumptions
are proposed: (1) Split light verb hypothesis: from a cartographic
point of view, the light verb “v” is not “ONE”
head, but an umbrella name of a rather “rich structural” zone, call
it “light verb field” or “light verb zone”. (2) About the argument
structure, it is proposed that in the complex light verb
constructions, the core of the predicate is not composed of one
single argument structure, but a chain of several argument
structures. (3) Correspondingly, the event structure can also be
looked at in more details in these structures: the idea is that in
the sentences contain chain argument structures, the event can also
be analyzed as a chain of event fragments, following rule-to-rule
correspondence principle.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.About the term “light verb”
- 2.1LVNs vs. LVBs
- 2.2Characteristics of “light verb” in Jespersenian sense
- 2.3Huang’s light verb analysis in Chinese
- 3.Internal configuration of light verb structures
- 3.1Observation step 1: Simplex Light Verb Shell Structures
- 3.2Observation step 2: Complex Light Verb Shell Structures
- 4.Concluding remarks
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