In:Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory 2010: Selected papers from 'Going Romance' Leiden 2010
Edited by Irene Franco, Sara Lusini and Andrés Saab
[Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory 4] 2012
► pp. 41–64
State nouns are Kimian states
Published online: 12 December 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/rllt.4.03fab
https://doi.org/10.1075/rllt.4.03fab
The study of states in the verbal domain has recently been enriched with the distinction between K-states and D-states (Maienborn 2005; Rothmayr 2009). This new line of research has not been extended to state denoting nouns, which have been in general much less studied than those nouns denoting objects or events (Grimshaw 1990). This paper takes this task and shows that in Spanish noun-denoting states systematically behave like K-states, even when they are derived from D-state verbs. We further argue that only verbs which contain a structure with a K-state meaning can have corresponding state denoting nouns. The result is that, far from being idiosyncratic, it is possible to predict – given the aspectual properties of a verbal predicate – whether a state can be expressed in the nominal domain. Keywords: states; K-state; D-state; nominalizations; deverbal nouns; aspect
Cited by (7)
Cited by seven other publications
AIGRO, MARI & VIRVE-ANNELI VIHMAN
Ormrod, David
Fábregas, Antonio & Rafael Marín
Malicka-Kleparska, Anna
2017. Circumfixed causatives in Polish against a panorama of active and non-active voice morphology. In Contrastive Studies in Verbal Valency [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, 237], ► pp. 432 ff.
Malicka-Kleparska, Anna
Malicka-Kleparska, Anna
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