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Demonstratives in motion| The grammaticalization of demonstratives as a window into synchronic phenomena

<p>There is significant variation in the literature on how demonstratives are characterized semantically, leading to divergent syntactic analyses of demonstratives. A major source of this disagreement regards how distance specifications relate to the demonstrative: whether [+/&minus; speaker] is an integral property of the demonstrative or not. I argue that distance-marking divides the class of demonstratives into strong and weak, along the lines of what Cardinaletti and Starke (1999) propose for pronouns. Strong demonstratives possess a [+/&minus; speaker] feature, while weak demonstratives have a neutral [speaker] feature, corresponding to a distance-neutral interpretation, and the pragmatic notion of immediate accessibility of the referent (Lyons 1999). </p><p> The diachronic component of this work serves as a lens through which to view the demonstrative&rsquo;s synchronic behavior. I argue that the process of grammaticalization (Meillet 1912) allows us to &lsquo;see&rsquo; certain aspects of a demonstrative&rsquo;s meaning (and, I argue, corresponding internal syntactic structure) getting peeled away as the demonstrative evolves. Latin <i> ille</i> and spoken Finnish <i>se</i> provide evidence that demonstratives pass through a distance-neutral phase before being analyzed as definite articles, suggesting that strong and weak demonstratives should receive distinct analyses in the synchronic domain. I argue that strong and weak demonstratives can be viewed as synchronic imprints of a diachronic process. </p><p> In addition to teasing apart different semantic types of demonstratives, this dissertation seeks to identify differences between demonstratives and definite articles. I propose that the demonstrative is specified for (i) [(+/&minus;) speaker], (ii) [+contrastive] (encoding contrast), and (iii) [+identifiability], and that these features are encoded on functional heads in the extended projection of the demonstrative. The complex demonstrative is merged in a dedicated functional projection ([Spec, TrackerAdjP) within the DP. The definite article, in contrast, expresses only [+identifiability], and is merged directly in the DP projection. I argue that the common core of [+identifiability] helps explain the synchronic and diachronic dependency between the demonstrative and the DP projection, and sheds light on our discussion on the phenomenon of apparent &lsquo;double definiteness.&rsquo; </p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:3601868
Date21 December 2013
CreatorsFerrazzano, Lisa Reisig
PublisherCity University of New York
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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