Affiliation:
1. Peking University
2. University of Hong Kong
Abstract
Abstract
This paper aims to make a contribution to the study of the nature of syntactic categories by analysing a single
element in a single language, namely the marker -lao in Yixing Chinese. Although this marker has previously been
analysed as an adjectivaliser (Hu and Perry 2018), we show that it has a much broader
range of uses. We suggest that the bulk of cases can be captured in a unified way by supposing that the marker in question
displays a type of possessive semantics (which we label possession-as-attribute), which is defined by delineating
a kind (in the sense of e.g. Carlson 1977; Chierchia 1998), with similar semantics being expressed by adjectival elements in languages such as
English. It is observed, however, that this meaning can emerge in the absence of the marker -lao, and that
-lao can, in a restricted set of cases, surface in the absence of this meaning, and we suggest that these
facts are attributable to the diachronic development of the marker and can be captured synchronically by making use of
late-insertion mechanisms for phonological and semantic features. We propose that the case of -lao provides a
suggestive argument for a substance-free approach to syntactic features, whereby syntactic features are not
inherently specified for interface interpretations. Other cross-linguistic implications of our analysis are noted, in particular
for the representation of adjectives.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company