Whamit!

The Weekly Newsletter of MIT Linguistics

Syntax Square 10/17 - Giovanni Roversi (MIT)

Speaker: Giovanni Roversi (MIT)
Title: Ā-extraction, Word Order, and Object Shift (?) in Äiwoo
Time: Tuesday, October 17th, 1pm – 2pm
Location: 32-D461

Abstract: I will present some ongoing work in progress I’ve been doing on the clausal syntax of Äiwoo, an Austronesian language from the Solomon Islands. Largely, Äiwoo shows some reassuringly familiar Austronesian fare: the classic “pivot-only” restriction on Ā-extraction is respected, whereby only the agent can be extracted from Actor Voice clauses, only the theme from Undergoer Voice clauses, etc. Part of this talk will focus on a series of interesting exceptions to this restrictions. In particular, we’ll take a look at the complex correlation between different types of objects (DPs, null pronouns, overt pronouns, reflexive anaphors), clausal word order, and extraction possibilities. This will then lead us to reconsidering a known aspect of Austronesian voice, across many languages. A definite theme is normally banned in Actor Voice, and requires Undergoer Voice instead (“John built.{✗AV, ✓UV} this house”); however, this ban is lifted when Actor Voice is forced by external syntactic pressures, for example by Ā-extraction of the agent (“I met the man [who built.{✓AV, ✗UV} this house]”). Although this is a known fact in the Austronesian literature, and it’s easy enough to describe, I suggest it’s been underrated how complex it is to actually account for and implement it, and how a correct analysis of it might have bigger-picture implications for the syntax-semantics interface and the architecture of the grammar.