From bogus@does.not.exist.com Fri Oct 17 19:34:09 2014 From: bogus@does.not.exist.com () Date: Fri, 17 Oct 2014 19:34:09 -0000 Subject: No subject Message-ID: ========================================================================= Date: Thu, 11 Feb 1999 12:21:09 -0500 Reply-To: The Distributed Morphology List To: The Distributed Morphology List From: Martha McGinnis Subject: zero affixes in DM Comments: To: dm-list at listserv.linguistlist.org Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" I would be interested in discussion about the role of zero affixes in DM. In _Language_ 70 (1994), 760-1, I gave reasons for unease about DM's readiness to recognize certain zero affixes in English verbforms; but no one active in DM has since tried to assuage my unease. Would some one on this list like to have a go? Or do people think my unease is justified? Because of the relatively close relationship in DM between syntactic terminal nodes and morphological 'pieces' (stems and affixes), DM needs to be generous in recognizing phonologically null, or zero, affixes. For example, according to DM, the past tense forms _waited_ and _sang_ in English are both got by inserting appropriate Vocabulary items into the structure [V [+past]]. To get _waited_, that's straightforward: we insert /wait/ and /ed/. But to get _sang_, it seems we have to insert /sing/ and zero, and then posit a readjustment rule converting /sing + zero/ into _sang_. As I explained in _Language_, such zeros create problems for my No Blur Principle, which I proposed there as a constraint on inflection class organization. How big a worry that is depends on what you think about the No Blur Principle. My own view is that it is empirically rich, is well supported by the evidence, and is naturally interpretable as a special case of the Principle of Contrast that governs vocabulary acquisition. What's more, a version of No Blur has (I think) further empirically rich implications for inflectional allomorphy outside the domain of inflection class organization -- implications which are well supported by evidence from Latin, Hungarian and Turkish (see my 'How lexical semantics constrains inflectional allomorphy', in _Yearbook of Morphology 1997, 1-24). Quite apart from that, the analysis of e.g. _sang_ as /sing + zero/ (with readjustment) leads to difficulties. In order to support their view that the supposed English zero affixes really are affixes, just like uncontroversial overt affixes, DM protagonists need to show that these zero affixes behave just like overt affixes in respect of readjustment. In other words, they need to show that: (a) substantially the same readjustments that operate where zero affixes are posited also operate where there are overt affixes, and: (b) zero affixes can appear without any readjustment just as freely as overt affixes do. But there is actually strong evidence against both (a) and (b). In respect of (a), it is easy to check that the vowel alternations that occur in verbs with overtly suffixed pasts like _sold_, _felt_ and _brought_ have little overlap with those that occur in verbs with 'zero-suffixed' pasts such as _sang_, _dug_ and _fell_, as Halle and Marantz themselves admit (_View from Building 20_ page 129: 'readjustment rules triggered by the /-n/ past participle and the zero past suffixes are considerably more complex than those triggered by /-d/ or /-t/'). In respect of (b), it turns out that the verbs for which Halle and Marantz posit a zero past suffix or a zero past participle suffix without any readjustment fall into narrow classes -- classes whose narrowness is unexplained in the DM framework. Verbs with a zero past suffix and no readjustment, such as _beat, cut, hit, shed_ and _spread_ all end in coronal stops. Verbs with a zero past participle suffix and no readjustment include all those just mentioned, plus _run_ and _come_. With an overt-suffix or nonsuffixal analysis, both biases seem explicable: perhaps one of the coronal suffixes /-t/ or /-d/ gets added to _beat_ etc. and undergoes cluster simplification, and perhaps _run_ and _come_ already look like 'good' past participle forms on the strength of their vocalic resemblance to _sung, struck, dug_ etc. But with the zero-suffix analysis of Halle and Marantz, these biases have to be regarded as purely accidental. It may be that an alternative to the zero-suffix analysis can be found within DM. If not, then the shortcomings of this analysis are an embarrassment for DM, it seems to me. Do people agree? Andrew Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy Associate Professor Department of Linguistics, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand phone (work) +64-3-364 2211; (home) +64-3-355 5108 fax +64-3-364 2969 e-mail a.c-mcc at ling.canterbury.ac.nz http://www.ling.canterbury.ac.nz/adc-m.html