Abstract
This paper shows, after Watkins (1967) and Tremblay (1989, 1991),
that the
possessive phrase of This is John's does not necessarily
include an elliptical Possessee.
This ambiguity is argued to arise from the dual nature of the possessive
marker,
which may either be inflectional or derivational in Modern English. In
the
first case, it may
be analysed as a functional head, as proposed by Abney (1987) and Kayne
(1993,
1994); in the second case, it operates in the lexicon, deriving possessive
adjectives
which exhibit complementary morphological and semantic properties in adnominal
and predicate positions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
29 articles.
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