Consequences of pair-merge (at the interfaces)
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						Argitaratua
						2007-04-13
					
				
																																														
														
									
													Aritz Irurtzun
																											Ángel J. Gallego
																									
				
													Laburpena
							The goal of this paper is to explore the basic properties of adjuncts  and some of the well-known puzzles these dependents pose for syntactic  theorizing within the scenario provided by the Minimalist Program (cf. Chomsky 1995 through the present). In so doing, we will briefly discuss  some controversial issues, like the argument-adjunct distinction, the  status of the (still poorly understood, and worse formally classified)  notion of 'deviance', and the semantic contribution of adjuncts, but the  main focus of this paper will be the formal operation of pair-Merge,  put forward by Chomsky (2000) and assumed to handle adjunction within  the current framework. In league with Uriagereka (2003), we want to  argue that adjuncts can give rise to two different readings, which we  will call Markovian and non-Markovian. The first one  is quite common in the literature, and plausibly instantiates the  Davidsonian analysis, whereby adjuncts are mechanically concatenated  predicates of the event.
						
					Nola aipatu
Irurtzun, Aritz, eta Ángel J. Gallego. 2007. «Consequences of Pair-Merge (at the Interfaces)». Anuario Del Seminario De Filología Vasca "Julio De Urquijo" 41 (2):179-200. https://doi.org/10.1387/asju.3896.
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