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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Copular Clauses

Specification, predication and equation

Line Mikkelsen
University of California, Berkeley

2005. viii, 210 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2809 3 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9413 5 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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This book is concerned with a class of copular clauses known as specificational clauses, and its relation to other kinds of copular structures, predicational and equative clauses in particular. Based on evidence from Danish and English, I argue that specificational clauses involve the same core predication structure as predicational clauses — one which combines a referential and a predicative expression to form a minimal predicational unit — but differ in how the predicational core is realized syntactically. Predicational copular clauses represent the canonical realization, where the referential expression is aligned with the most prominent syntactic position, the subject position. Specificational clauses involve an unusual alignment of the predicative expression with subject position. I suggest that this unusual alignment is grounded in information structure: the alignment of the less referential DP with the subject position serves a discourse connective function by letting material that is relatively familiar in the discourse appear before material that is relatively unfamiliar in the discourse. Equative clauses are argued to be fundamentally different.


Table of contents

Acknowledgements
vii
1. Introduction
1–3
I. Structure
4
2. Predicate topicalization
6–40
3. Alternative structures for specificational clauses
41–45
II. Meaning
46
4. Decomposing copular clauses
48–63
5. Determining the subject type
64–93
6. The type of the predicate complement
94–107
7. Consequences and extensions
108–130
III. Use
131
8. Aspects of use
133–161
9. An intergrated analysis
162–190
10.Conclusion
191–194
References
195–204
Index
205–210


This is a beautiful piece of work, one that I have had much pleasure reading and discussing with students and colleagues. Mikkelsen's account of copular clauses is simply elegant. She is so thorough in her treatment of these copular constructions that in our discussion of her analysis in a recent MIT seminar there wasn't any comment that wasn't already anticipated in her own caveats and footnotes.
Michel DeGraff, Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, MIT