DPs and Demonstratives
John Boyle
jpboyle at uchicago.edu
Mon Feb 20 20:45:02 UTC 2006
Thanks Bryan. I’m not really sure that demonstrative is the right name for these
things to either. Given what Jan said about Lakota being able to have both:
1) Demonstrative Noun Determiner
2) Noun Demonstrative Determiner
we may want to assume your right and the structure is:
DP
!
D’
/ !
NP D
/ !
DEM N’
!
N
Where DEM can either proceed or follow N. Thus, it would c-command N but
not D. Would this give us a better analysis? Jan, what is the difference between
the word orders in (1) and (2)?
Thanks,
John Boyle
---- Original message ----
>Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2006 13:15:59 -0600
>From: "Bryan Gordon" <linguista at gmail.com>
>Subject: Re: DPs and Demonstratives
>To: siouan at lists.colorado.edu
>
> Personally, I'm sceptical of the designation
> "demonstrative" in general. It
> seems to be used to ascribe both deictic capacity
> and the syntactic
> behaviour of determiners under the same category -
> which is clearly NOT
> appropriate for Siouan. Is it possible that Siouan
> deictics don't c-command
> D at all, but are contained within NP?
>
> - Bryan Gordon
>
> On 2/20/06, jpboyle at uchicago.edu
> <jpboyle at uchicago.edu > wrote:
>
> Hi All,
>
> I am just looking at noun phrases that have both a
> determiner and a
> demonstrative. I was wondering if anyone else has
> looked at these besides
> Randy and Catherine (who should of course feel
> obligated to reply to this e-mail
> anyway). In Missouri Valley the structure is:
>
> Demonstrative Noun-Determiner
>
> I think this is true for other Siouan languages as
> well, correct? Has anyone
> thought about how to analyze these constructions
> (specifically in an X'bar
> framework)? Are they DPs that have a
> demonstrative phrase (DemP) in SPEC and
> an NP complement (as in 1)?
>
> 1) [[Dem P [NP ]]DP]
>
> DP
> / !
> DemP D'
> / !
> NP D
>
> This would make it all left branching, which is
> what we would assume, right?
>
> Or are they DemPs that take a DP Complement that
> then take an NP complement
> (as in 2)?
>
> 2 [Dem P [[NP DP]]]
>
> DemP
> !
> Dem'
> / !
> Dem DP
> !
> D'
> / !
> NP D
>
> This structure would be both right branching and
> left branching (possible but
> not as pretty). Is there any evidence for either
> analysis?
>
> Thanks
>
> John Boyle
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