In:Resumptive Pronouns at the Interfaces
Edited by Alain Rouveret
[Language Faculty and Beyond 5] 2011
► pp. 367–394
Resumptives, movement and interpretation
Published online: 20 July 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/lfab.5.10dem
https://doi.org/10.1075/lfab.5.10dem
It is a minority position that resumptive structures are always created by movement. This is the null hypothesis, though, on the assumption that binders always arise via movement. We show that this position accounts naturally for a variety of data from Jordanian Arabic involving resumptive pronouns and epithets. On our specific proposal, the resumptive pronoun itself moves at LF, and then goes uninterpreted – resumptive structures in Jordanian constitute one of a number of contexts where pronouns have this happen to them. The standard arguments against movement in resumptive structures do not apply to our proposal. We suggest that our analysis extends to “intrusive” resumptive pronouns in languages like English.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Chierchia, Gennaro
Rouveret, Alain
2019. Computational and semantic aspects of resumption. In Interfaces in grammar [Language Faculty and Beyond, 15], ► pp. 49 ff.
Sportiche, Dominique
2018. Resumed phrases (are always moved, even with in-island resumption). In Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory 14 [Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory, 14], ► pp. 309 ff.
McCloskey, James
Pan, Victor Junnan
2016. Resumptivity and two types of A′‑dependencies in the Minimalist Program. International Journal of Chinese Linguistics 3:1 ► pp. 45 ff.
[no author supplied]
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