Join Zoom Meeting April 16 11-12 CET
https://york-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/99870259221
Nominalisations and corresponding verbal/clausal constituents share
properties that can be accounted for by either relating them derivationally
or attributing some common intrinsic properties (as Chomsky 1970 suggests)
to both of them. A less discussed parallelism concerns case alignment in
nominals. This is probably due to the fact that the best studied languages
usually exhibit a non-clause-like pattern in their nominals, whereby any
adnominal arguments may bear the same default case, commonly referred to as
the ‘genitive’, regardless of thematic relationships. In a number of
languages, however, adnominal arguments may also bear a non-default case,
dependent upon the presence of a default-marked argument. In this paper we
establish that in such languages, the alignment in nominals is of the same
type as case alignment in clausal constituents. We further address the
question whether, in order to get clause-like case combinations, the verbal
projections typically associated with them need to be present and get
nominalised or whether the same case assigning principles operate in
nominals and clauses alike, with no need to share v-structure.
We will be available for two Zoom Q & A Sessions on April 15 11-12 CET and
April 16 11-12 CET.