Abstract
Internally caused change-of-state verbs have recently been established as alternating verbs in languages such as English and Greek, thus becoming an important component of any analysis of the causative alternation. Generally, this type of alternation qualifies as a labile one, as in both intransitive and transitive uses of such verbs the same form is used. The behavior of internally caused change-of-state verbs in the causative alternation, however, differs radically from that of verbs such as open, as they split into two subclasses: one that predominantly takes causer subjects (blossom), and one that behaves like open (ferment), being able to take agentive subjects as well. In this paper, I investigate the properties of internally caused change-of-state verbs in English and Greek, and offer an analysis thereof adopting the syntactic decomposition of causative predicates put forth in Alexiadou et al. (2006, in press), according to which the causative alternation is a Voice alternation. I argue that the subject of the transitive variant of internally caused change-of-state verbs of the ferment class is introduced in Spec,VoiceP, and as a result it is not thematically restricted to the role of causer. The subject of the blossom class is introduced in vP and thus is restricted to the causer role. This difference between the two classes of internally caused verbs change-of-state is reflected also in the impossibility of the blossom class to undergo passivization.
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- The problem with internally caused change-of-state verbs
- P-lability and radical P-alignment
- Labile verbs in Late Latin
- The persistence of labile verbs in the French causative-anticausative alternation
- On the relation between labilizations and neuter gender: Evidence from the Greek diachrony
- The lure of lability: A synchronic and diachronic investigation of the labile pattern in Estonian
- Direct and indirect evidence for lability in Middle Indo-Aryan
- The decline of labile syntax in Old Indo-Aryan: A diachronic typological perspective
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- The problem with internally caused change-of-state verbs
- P-lability and radical P-alignment
- Labile verbs in Late Latin
- The persistence of labile verbs in the French causative-anticausative alternation
- On the relation between labilizations and neuter gender: Evidence from the Greek diachrony
- The lure of lability: A synchronic and diachronic investigation of the labile pattern in Estonian
- Direct and indirect evidence for lability in Middle Indo-Aryan
- The decline of labile syntax in Old Indo-Aryan: A diachronic typological perspective