Publication | Closed Access
The Subject-in-Situ Generalization and the Role of Case in Driving Computations
431
Citations
38
References
2001
Year
Artificial IntelligenceEngineeringSubject MovementAdvanced Driver-assistance SystemIntelligent SystemsSubject-in-situ GeneralizationSemanticsSyntactic StructureDriving ComputationsSyntaxDriver BehaviorComputational LinguisticsNovel GeneralizationSystems EngineeringComputational ParadigmGrammarLanguage StudiesMachine TranslationPrinciple Of CompositionalityComputer ScienceAutonomous DrivingDriver PerformanceArgumentation FrameworkCategorial GrammarPhilosophy Of LanguageAutomated ReasoningArgument ExternalizationLinguisticsTheoretical Linguistics
The article establishes a novel generalization concerning the placement of arguments by Spell-Out. It centers on the principles that force arguments to leave the VP across languages. The empirical domain consists of constructions where subject movement is not required for reasons that have to do with the Extended Projection Principle. In these environments and whenever a sentence contains both a subject and a direct object, one of the arguments must vacate the VP. We argue that argument externalization is related to Case. It is forced because movement of both arguments to a single head T 0 that contains two active Case features in the covert component is banned.
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