No ordered arguments needed for nouns

Authors

  • Scott Grimm Universitat Pompeu Fabra Author

Abstract

Syntacticians have widely assumed since [11] that there is a fundamental difference between so-called argument structure nominals (AS-nominals, also called Complex Event Nominals), e.g. destruction, and non-AS-nominals, e.g. book ([1, 5], i.a.). Grimshaw provided a list of properties characterizing AS-nominals, most notably that they have obligatory arguments (e.g. the destruction *(of Carthage) by the Romans). She and others have associated having argument structure with having event structure, but it has never been clear what having or lacking such structures amounts to semantically. In this paper we present extensive corpus evidence that AS-nominals do not in fact exist as a distinct class. This result, we argue, removes an important challenge to [9]s hypothesis that eventuality denoting nouns systematically lack an ordered-argument semantics.

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Published

2013-12-01

Issue

Section

Conference Proceedings

How to Cite

Grimm, S. (2013). No ordered arguments needed for nouns. Proceedings of the Amsterdam Colloquium, 123-130. https://platform.openjournals.nl/PAC/article/view/22446