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The Lexical Semantics of Parenthical‐ as and Appositive‐ which
Author(s) -
Potts Christopher
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
syntax
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.587
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 1467-9612
pISSN - 1368-0005
DOI - 10.1111/1467-9612.00047
Subject(s) - linguistics , section (typography) , relative clause , predicate (mathematical logic) , morpheme , dependent clause , semantics (computer science) , lexical semantics , computer science , lexical item , philosophy , sentence , programming language , operating system
Despite their superficial similarities, nonrestrictive relatives and as ‐parentheticals show contrasting behavior in a range of apparently disparate domains, including (i) equative constructions (section 4); (ii) selective island contexts (section 5); and (iii) clause‐internal “niching” (section 7). Additionally, as ‐parentheticals allow a wider range of interpretations relative to their antecedents than do appositive relatives (section 6). This paper offers a unified account of these differences and others based largely on the respective semantic types of the gaps these clauses define: as ‐clause traces are propositional; nonrestrictive relative traces are individual denoting (i.e., nominalized propositions). The type distinction follows from the lexical denotations of these morphemes (section 2) and combines with independently motivated principles to predict the clauses’ divergent behavior. The analysis also unifies the various kinds of appositive‐relatives and similarly informs our understanding of predicate‐type as ‐clauses (e.g., Sue hates parties, as does Ali ); see section 8.

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