In:Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Vietnamese Linguistics
Edited by Nigel Duffield, Trang Phan and Tue Trinh
[Studies in Language Companion Series 211] 2019
► pp. 69–80
Chapter 4A more perfect unification
Exploring a Nano-syntactic solution to Vietnamese đã
Trang Phan | University of Languages & International Studies, Vietnam National University – Hanoi, Vietnam
Published online: 9 October 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.211.04pha
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.211.04pha
Abstract
In this paper, we provide a new analysis of the Negative Constraint in Vietnamese, whereby the anterior morpheme đã loses its perfect reading in negative contexts. The Nanosyntax approach adopted here is claimed to derive this constraint without the stipulations inherent in existing formal accounts (e.g., Trinh 2005; Duffield 2017; Phan & Duffield 2016, 2019).
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Previous treatments
- 3.A Nanosyntactic approach to the Negation Constraint
- 4.Conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes References
References (30)
Baunaz, Lena, De Clercq, Karen, Haegeman, Liliane, & Lander, Eric T. 2018. Exploring Nanosyntax. Oxford: OUP.
Bui, Thuy. 2019. Temporal reference in Vietnamese. In Duffield, Nigel, Phan, Trang & Trinh, Tue (eds) [this volume].
Chomsky, Noam. 1989. Some Notes on Economy of Derivation and Representation. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 10: 43–74.
Duffield, Nigel. 1998. Auxiliary placement and interpretation in Vietnamese. In Proceedings of the 34th Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, M. Catherine Gruber, Derrick Higgins, Kenneth S. Olson & Tamra Wysocki (eds), 95–109. Chicago IL: CLS.
. 1999. Final modals, adverbs and antisymmetry in Vietnamese. Revue Québécoise de Linguistique 27(2): 92–129.
. 2013. Head-first: On the head-initiality of Vietnamese clauses. In Linguistics of Vietnamese: An International Survey, Daniel Hole & Elisabeth Löbel (eds), 127–155. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
. 2014. Minimalism and semantic syntax: Interpreting multifunctionality in Vietnamese. In International Conference on the Linguistics of Vietnam in the Context of Renovation and Integration, 1090–1113. Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản Khoa học Xã hội. [LingBuzz/001919].
Harizanov, Boris & Gribanova, Vera. 2018. Whither head movement? Natural Language & Linguistic Theory.
Lander, Eric T. 2016. The Nanosyntax of the Northwest Germanic Reinforced Demonstrative. PhD dissertation, Ghent University.
Law, Paul. 2014. Negation-final yes-no questions in Vietnamese. TEAL 9, University of Nantes, France.
Lin, Jo-Wang. 2005. Time in a language without tense: The case of Chinese. Journal of Semantics 23: 1–53.
Matthews, Stephen. 1990. A Cognitive Approach to the Typology of Verbal Aspect. PhD dissertation, University of Southern California, Los Angeles.
Miestamo, Matti & van der Auwera, Johan. 2011. Negation and perfective vs. imperfective aspect. Cahiers Chronos 22: 65–84.
Panfilov, Vladimir Zinovʹevich. 2002. Một lần nữa về phạm trù thì trong tiếng Việt (One more time on the category of tense in Vietnamese). Ngôn ngữ (Language) 7: 1–7.
Phan, Trang. 2013. Syntax of Vietnamese Aspect. PhD dissertation, School of English, University of Sheffield.
. In preparation. The nanosyntax of Vietnamese negators. Ms, University of Languages & International Studies, Vietnam National University – Hanoi.
Phan, Trang & Duffield, Nigel. 2016. A nanosyntax account of the negation constraint on the perfect auxiliary in Vietnamese. Presented at Chronos 12, Caen University, France.
. 2019. The Vietnamese perfect: A compositional analysis. In Cross-linguistic Perspectives on the Semantics of Grammatical Aspect (Cahiers Chronos), Adeline Patard, Rea Peltola & Emmanuelle Roussel (eds). Leiden: Brill.
Phan, Trang & Lander, Eric T. 2015. Vietnamese and the NP/DP parameter. Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue Canadienne de Linguistique 60(3): 391–415.
Pollock, Jean-Yves. 1989. Verb Movement, Universal Grammar and the Structure of IP. Linguistic Inquiry 20: 365–424.
Starke, Michael. 2009. Nanosyntax: A short primer to a new approach to language. In Nordlyd 36.1. Special issue on Nanosyntax, Peter Svenonius, Gillian Ramchand, Michael Starke & Knut Taraldsen (eds), 1–6. Tromsø: CASTL.
