Article published In: Sign Language & Linguistics
Vol. 25:2 (2022) ► pp.135–162
ASL negative incorporation as negative suppletion
Published online: 23 June 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/sll.20012.bem
https://doi.org/10.1075/sll.20012.bem
Abstract
While there are several analyses of negation in American Sign Language (ASL), the phenomenon of negative incorporation has been overlooked in the generative literature, except for Sandler, Wendy. 1999. Cliticization and prosodic words in a sign language. In Tracy Hall & Ursula Kleinhenz (eds.), Studies on the phonological word, 223–255. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. phonological analysis. The phonological approach makes several useful generalizations but is not without its drawbacks. We, therefore, situate our analysis in the Distributed Morphology framework and argue that negative incorporation is best analyzed as a case of negative suppletion. We motivate our approach based on the observations that (i) negative incorporation is sentential negation, (ii) negative incorporation blocks the occurrence of the canonical negation strategy for the affected verbs, and (iii) there is no verb-to-Neg movement in ASL. When taken together, these factors indicate that negative incorporation cannot be affixation. Suppletion, however, alleviates the problematic aspects of the phonological analysis while maintaining the relevant phonological generalizations.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Negation in ASL
- 3.Negative incorporation as affixation
- 4.A closer look at negative incorporation
- 4.1Negative incorporation is clausal negation
- 4.2A blocking effect
- 5.No movement to Neg0
- 6.Distributed morphology
- 6.1Spanning
- 7.Negative incorporation is negative suppletion
- 8.Conclusion
- Notes
References
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