The leaf fell (the leaf): The online processing of unaccusatives

N Friedmann, G Taranto, LP Shapiro, D Swinney - Linguistic inquiry, 2008 - direct.mit.edu
N Friedmann, G Taranto, LP Shapiro, D Swinney
Linguistic inquiry, 2008direct.mit.edu
Abstract According to the Unaccusative Hypothesis, unaccusative subjects are base-
generated in object position and move to subject position. We examined this hypothesis
using the cross-modal lexical priming technique, which tests whether and when an
antecedent is reactivated during the online processing of a sentence. We compared
sentences containing unergative verbs with sentences containing unaccusatives, both
alternating and nonalternating, and found that subjects of unaccusatives reactivate after the …
Abstract
According to the Unaccusative Hypothesis, unaccusative subjects are base-generated in object position and move to subject position. We examined this hypothesis using the cross-modal lexical priming technique, which tests whether and when an antecedent is reactivated during the online processing of a sentence. We compared sentences containing unergative verbs with sentences containing unaccusatives, both alternating and nonalternating, and found that subjects of unaccusatives reactivate after the verb, while subjects of unergatives do not. Alternating unaccusatives showed a mixed pattern of reactivation. The research directly supports the Unaccusative Hypothesis.
MIT Press
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果