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Last update:
5 September 2010

© John Benjamins
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The argument structure of evaluative adjectives: A case of pseudo-raising

Laura Kertz, University of California, San Diego

Evaluative adjectives permit an alternation between two control structures: a canonical subject control structure, where a matrix subject serves as the controller for an unexpressed subject argument in an embedded infinitival clause, and a sentential subject structure, where the controller surfaces as a genitive-marked argument of the adjective. These structures both instantiate an obligatory control interpretation, despite the non-local control configuration of the latter. A syntactic analysis demonstrates that the subject control structure projects control into an adjunct clause, and the source of the alternation, as well as various apparent raising-like behaviors, is attributed to the relatively simple argument structure of evaluative adjectives as compared to other more complex adjectives and their related forms.

In: Hornstein, Norbert and Maria Polinsky (eds.), Movement Theory of Control. 2010. vii, 330 pp. (pp. 269–298)