Article published In: Studies in Language
Vol. 9:2 (1985) ► pp.159–195
A Functional Explanation of French Nonlexical Datives
Published online: 1 January 1985
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.9.2.02bar
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.9.2.02bar
The unity of French lexical and nonlexical uses of the dative clitic is made apparent by a functional analysis according to which the dative clitic always represents a 'theme' of the sentence, where thematicity is defined as greater relative saliency based on certain purely semantic (not pragmatic) properties and relations of arguments. The operation of certain semantic constraints on the nonlexical datives, which may be very approximately summarized as requiring that the dative complement be animate and that it be somehow affected by the act denoted by the rest of the VP, follows naturally, in accord with Dik's Markedness Hypothesis (Dik (1978)), from the view that the nonlexical datives represent a 'thematization' of an element which is otherwise (in alternative nondative constructions) represented as peripheral to the described event. The more limited occurrence of á-NP in nonlexical dative environments is explained by reference to general syntactic constraints on the language, together with the fact that à-NP, unlike the dative clitic, tends to be interpreted as an argument of V.
Cited by (12)
Cited by 12 other publications
Legallois, Dominique
2021.
The French ditransitive transfer construction and the
complementarity between the meta-predicates give, take, keep,
leave
. In Give Constructions across Languages [Constructional Approaches to Language, 29], ► pp. 97 ff.
Tyler, Matthew
Fraser, Katherine
Deal, Amy Rose
Zribi-Hertz, Anne
Winters, Richard
García-Miguel, José M.
Kliffer, Michael D.
Koenig, Jean-Pierre
BRUMMEL, JÖRG
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 3 december 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.
