The emergence of middle voice readings with and without agents
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/7615Date
2014-05-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
This article presents evidence that, cross-linguistically or within the
same language (family), there appears to be no morphosyntactic properties and/
or structures specifically designated for the formation of middle voice constructions.
What has been labeled a ‘middle voice construction’ is a semantic interpretation
that, crucially, is blocked when an event variable is existentially closed
by T. This article focuses on two ways of expressing a middle statement; namely
(i) middle voice readings that occur with lexical-s passives, and (ii) adjectival
middles – in Mainland Scandinavian, showing that properties such as the availability
of an agent in middles pattern with whether an event variable is present
(in the structure) or not. These are the result of two equally valid and productive
grammatical structures: one where an event variable is present, an agent is projected
and a modal operator blocks existential closure of the event variable, and
another one where the event variable is not present in the structure, and therefore
the operator is not necessary – hence impossible.
Publisher
Mouton de GruyterCitation
The Linguistic Review 31(2014) nr. 2 s. 193-240Metadata
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