PCC Effects with Expletives and Non-Associate Postverbal Subjects in Bolognese

This paper contrasts a Bolognese postverbal subject construction and other grammars with the common Romance one (also in Bolognese) that has longdistance full agreement of the tensed verb and the Case Licensed subject, with an expletive satisfying EPP. In the new Bolognese data, full agreement is ab...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIsogloss Vol. 8; no. 2; pp. 1 - 16
Main Author Rubin, Edward
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bellaterra Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Servei de Publicacions 2022
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
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Summary:This paper contrasts a Bolognese postverbal subject construction and other grammars with the common Romance one (also in Bolognese) that has longdistance full agreement of the tensed verb and the Case Licensed subject, with an expletive satisfying EPP. In the new Bolognese data, full agreement is absent, a special clitic occurs, and the postverbal subject is person restricted.Lack of subject agreement also raises questions about its licensing.The Minimalist proposal is that grammars like Bolognese can specify a feature set on theexpletive that checks EPP in this data, and that it is thus an independent second nominalin the domain of the sole agreement and Case Licensing probe, T. This specified expletiveis shown to explain all the properties of this data. For the person restrictions and Case Licensing of the postverbal subject, it applies Cyclic/Multiple Agree, the elaboration ofAgree underlying PCCeffects, to the two nominals. The analysis is extended to othergrammars with similar but slightly differing data by simple manipulation of the featureseton the specified expletive and of the clitic inventory of the grammar.
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ISSN:2385-4138
2385-4138
DOI:10.5565/rev/isogloss.128