Chapter 3. Displaced modification
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Hideki Kishimoto
Abstract
The picture-noun construction in Marathi has a constituent structure in which the imagee-NP marked with genitive case appears outside the participial complement clause, i.e. it does not appear as a direct argument to the verb in the complement clause. It is shown that Japanese has the same type of picture-noun construction, which is not an instance of the genitive-subject construction derived by nominative-genitive conversion. In the picture-noun construction, the genitive NP, which is structurally related to the picture noun head, is interpreted as the subject of the complement clause. We argue that the imagee NP controls an invisible pronoun residing in the complement clause, and is thus understood as the subject of that clause. We discuss a number of empirical facts regarding the picture-noun complements in Marathi and Japanese that provide support for this analysis.
Abstract
The picture-noun construction in Marathi has a constituent structure in which the imagee-NP marked with genitive case appears outside the participial complement clause, i.e. it does not appear as a direct argument to the verb in the complement clause. It is shown that Japanese has the same type of picture-noun construction, which is not an instance of the genitive-subject construction derived by nominative-genitive conversion. In the picture-noun construction, the genitive NP, which is structurally related to the picture noun head, is interpreted as the subject of the complement clause. We argue that the imagee NP controls an invisible pronoun residing in the complement clause, and is thus understood as the subject of that clause. We discuss a number of empirical facts regarding the picture-noun complements in Marathi and Japanese that provide support for this analysis.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction ix
- List of works by John B. Whitman xiii
-
Part I. Syntax and morphology
- Chapter 1. On complement selection in Spanish and Japanese 3
- Chapter 2. The syntactic status of by -phrases in Korean and Japanese 23
- Chapter 3. Displaced modification 45
- Chapter 4. Some asymmetries of long distance scope assignment in Sinhala 73
- Chapter 5. Autosegmental evaluative morphology in Japanese 97
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Part II. Interfaces
- Chapter 6. On the distribution of the discourse particles - yo in Korean and - ne in Japanese 125
- Chapter 7. Wh- indefinites in East Asian languages 139
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Part III. Diachrony
- Chapter 8. Resultative and termination 157
- Chapter 9. Differential argument marking and object movement in Old Japanese 181
- Chapter 10. Possessive nominal phrases in Lamaholot 207
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Part IV. Psycholinguistics
- Chapter 11. An experimental study of children’s comprehension of lexical and productive causatives in Japanese 229
- Chapter 12. Parsing Chinese relative clauses with structural and non-structural cues 253
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Part V. Phonology
- Chapter 13. The inexorable spread of 〈ou〉 in Romanized Japanese 287
- Chapter 14. Loanword accent of Kyungsang Korean 303
- Chapter 15. The role of perceived similarity and contrast 331
- Chapter 16. The status of schwa in Indonesian 343
- Chapter 17. Quantitative and qualitative restrictions on the distribution of lexical tones in Thai 371
- Subject index 387
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction ix
- List of works by John B. Whitman xiii
-
Part I. Syntax and morphology
- Chapter 1. On complement selection in Spanish and Japanese 3
- Chapter 2. The syntactic status of by -phrases in Korean and Japanese 23
- Chapter 3. Displaced modification 45
- Chapter 4. Some asymmetries of long distance scope assignment in Sinhala 73
- Chapter 5. Autosegmental evaluative morphology in Japanese 97
-
Part II. Interfaces
- Chapter 6. On the distribution of the discourse particles - yo in Korean and - ne in Japanese 125
- Chapter 7. Wh- indefinites in East Asian languages 139
-
Part III. Diachrony
- Chapter 8. Resultative and termination 157
- Chapter 9. Differential argument marking and object movement in Old Japanese 181
- Chapter 10. Possessive nominal phrases in Lamaholot 207
-
Part IV. Psycholinguistics
- Chapter 11. An experimental study of children’s comprehension of lexical and productive causatives in Japanese 229
- Chapter 12. Parsing Chinese relative clauses with structural and non-structural cues 253
-
Part V. Phonology
- Chapter 13. The inexorable spread of 〈ou〉 in Romanized Japanese 287
- Chapter 14. Loanword accent of Kyungsang Korean 303
- Chapter 15. The role of perceived similarity and contrast 331
- Chapter 16. The status of schwa in Indonesian 343
- Chapter 17. Quantitative and qualitative restrictions on the distribution of lexical tones in Thai 371
- Subject index 387