Affiliation:
1. Université de Lille
2. Université Polytechnique Hauts-de-France
Abstract
Abstract
This study focuses on French and English abstract nouns denoting properties that can be ascribed to humans, such
as beauty, carefulness and anger. Previous research showed that some but not all of these nouns are licensed in both locative
existentials (e.g., There’s an intense anger in Isabella) and possessive existentials (e.g., Isabella has an intense anger). What
remains unclear is how these and other patterns correlate among themselves depending on how easily they host such nouns. We here
use speaker ratings of these nouns in different constructional environments. A principal component analysis suggests that the main
dimension underlying native speakers’ ratings of these abstract nouns in six different patterns is temporal limitability. This
gradable distinction, strongly correlated with the locative existential, holds for both the French and English data and outweighs
any French-English contrastive differences in how acceptable human property nouns are considered to be in the patterns
studied.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company