On analysing fragments: the case of No?

Author:

Wallage Phillip1,van der Wurff Wim2

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Arts, Design and Social Sciences , 5995 Northumbria University , Newcastle upon Tyne , UK

2. School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics , 5994 Newcastle University , Newcastle upon Tyne , UK

Abstract

Abstract This paper addresses the analysis of sentence fragments, specifically the English negative polar response item no. Two main types of synchronic analysis have been proposed for present-day English – one in which yes and no are syntactically inert particles which substitute for a clause, the other in which they are the initial element of an elided clause. Using diachronic data from 15th- to 17th-century English, we argue that the emergence of a novel other-speaker question pattern involving no demonstrates that speakers of early English analysed interrogative polar no as the initial element of a clause with TP-ellipsis. This novel pattern has received little attention in the literature, yet this grammatical innovation is interesting because its emergence demonstrates how diachronic change can be used as a diagnostic for underlying grammatical structure.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference111 articles.

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4. PCEEC: Parsed Corpus of Early English Correspondence, parsed version. 2006. Annotated by Ann Taylor, Arja Nurmi, Anthony Warner, Susan Pintzuk, and Terttu Nevalainen. Compiled by the CEEC Project Team. York: University of York and Helsinki: University of Helsinki. Distributed through the Oxford Text Archive.

5. PPCEME: Kroch, Anthony, Beatrice Santorini & Lauren Delfs. 2004. The Penn-Helsinki Parsed Corpus of Early Modern English (PPCEME). Department of Linguistics, University of Pennsylvania. CD-ROM, first edition, release 3 [http://www.ling.upenn.edu/ppche/ppche-release-2016/PPCEME-RELEASE-3].

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