This paper reviews new data supporting the inclusion of a Speech Act Phrase in the left periphery. Illocutionary and evidential adverbs in English shift orientation from speakers in declarative sentences to addressees in yes-no interrogative sentences. This orientation shift falls out of independently motivated principles: the adverbs contain a logophorically-sensitive PRO subject which is controlled by a syntactic representation of the discourse participants contained in a Speech Act Phrase high in the CP layer. It will be suggested that clause type modulates which discourse participants are available; only speakers are available in declaratives whereas addressees are also available in interrogatives
This article investigates the nature of predication of so-called subject-oriented adverbs in English...
This paper discusses participant-oriented uses of adverbs and tries to motivate their conceptual fle...
International audienceThis paper addresses two properties of conditional clauses: (i) their incompat...
Orientation is a well known property of some adverbs in English. Early approaches to the topic simpl...
AbstractOrientation is a well known property of some adverbs in English. Early approaches to the top...
Languages can be classified into three types, e.g. situation-oriented (e.g. Russian, Chienese, etc.)...
This study investigates stance-taking strategies in a context of an examination of spoken English. T...
The purpose of this paper is to clarify syntactic and semantic properties of viewpoint subjuncts of ...
Languages can be classifi ed into three types, e.g. situation-oriented (e.g. Russian, Chinese, etc.),...
International audienceEnglish ('central') adverbial clauses are incompatible with argument fronting ...
This paper solves two puzzles about the interpretation of appositive constructions in English: (i) i...
A crosslinguistic survey of the expression of polarity emphasis reveals that some such expressions a...
This paper discusses participant-oriented uses of adverbs and tries to motivate their conceptual fle...
Unlike subject-orientation in English ‘-ly’ adverbs, subject-relatedness does not conflate two synta...
English adverbial clauses are incompatible with argument fronting (1a) (Haegeman 2006) and with mark...
This article investigates the nature of predication of so-called subject-oriented adverbs in English...
This paper discusses participant-oriented uses of adverbs and tries to motivate their conceptual fle...
International audienceThis paper addresses two properties of conditional clauses: (i) their incompat...
Orientation is a well known property of some adverbs in English. Early approaches to the topic simpl...
AbstractOrientation is a well known property of some adverbs in English. Early approaches to the top...
Languages can be classified into three types, e.g. situation-oriented (e.g. Russian, Chienese, etc.)...
This study investigates stance-taking strategies in a context of an examination of spoken English. T...
The purpose of this paper is to clarify syntactic and semantic properties of viewpoint subjuncts of ...
Languages can be classifi ed into three types, e.g. situation-oriented (e.g. Russian, Chinese, etc.),...
International audienceEnglish ('central') adverbial clauses are incompatible with argument fronting ...
This paper solves two puzzles about the interpretation of appositive constructions in English: (i) i...
A crosslinguistic survey of the expression of polarity emphasis reveals that some such expressions a...
This paper discusses participant-oriented uses of adverbs and tries to motivate their conceptual fle...
Unlike subject-orientation in English ‘-ly’ adverbs, subject-relatedness does not conflate two synta...
English adverbial clauses are incompatible with argument fronting (1a) (Haegeman 2006) and with mark...
This article investigates the nature of predication of so-called subject-oriented adverbs in English...
This paper discusses participant-oriented uses of adverbs and tries to motivate their conceptual fle...
International audienceThis paper addresses two properties of conditional clauses: (i) their incompat...