Prepositions and Results in Italian and English: An Analysis from Event Decomposition

2005 ◽  
pp. 81-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raffaella Folli ◽  
Gillian Ramchand
Keyword(s):  

Having the greatest power on nearly all states’ political standpoints the USA has touched upon the events of 1915 through myriad of political and official documents. The suppositional and subcontextual meaning of the USA political discourse and its semantical representation is initially studied in the scope of the theory of event semantics. The present article attempts to represent the events of 1915 in political discourse within the context of event analysis. The article examines the concept of complex event as an analytical tool, introducing a deep event modeling and event decomposition of causative verbs. Supposedly, the article intends to strucet the USA political discourse within the framework of official announcements and annual presidential statements.


Author(s):  
Artemis Alexiadou ◽  
Elena Anagnostopoulou ◽  
Florian Schäfer

Author(s):  
Xuhui Hu

This chapter argues that the English resultative construction denotes a single event involving two predicates. Therefore, only a single EP is involved in the syntactic derivation. The special thematic relationship is due to constraints imposed by the Integration Conditions proposed in Chapter 2. Dispensing with the CAUSE head of the event decomposition approach, this chapter explains the possible lack of causative meaning in English resultatives. A secondary predicate in a resultative can get a dynamic BECOME meaning (such as flat in John hammered the metal flat) because the secondary predicate shares the dynamic [iDiv] feature provided by V. Since both the activity denoted by the matrix V and the dynamic change of state take place in the same temporal scope of EP, the interpretation of a potential (and cancellable) culmination point is derived.


2019 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 10-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hoang Long Nguyen ◽  
Jason J. Jung

2018 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-154
Author(s):  
Yangyu Sun

Abstract This paper analyzes the syntactic properties of the “ba-construction” or “disposal form” in Mandarin Chinese under new theoretical frameworks. By introducing the event-decomposition method proposed by Ramchand (2008), it argues that the ba-construction conveys the causativity and the resultativity of the event at the same time, which can be shown from the syntactic representation. Then, this paper tests the position of ba, assuming that it is a functional head, and the result of the test indicates that ba is a voice head in the hierarchy of functional projections proposed by Cinque (1999, 2006). The final word order of a ba-construction can be derived by the argument movement of the direct object and by a head movement of ba or by the merge of ba at the head position of the higher functional head of a split VoiceP.


Nordlyd ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Pantcheva

In this paper, I explore the combination possibilities of Bulgarian directional prefixes with various motion verbs. Adopting Ramchand’s (in press) event decomposition, Zwarts’ (2005) vector space semantics for directional prepositions, and drawing on various discussions regarding the manner component in the verbal meaning, I propose an analysis that captures the distribution of Goal and Source prefixes. I show how this proposal accounts for the change in the syntactic behavior of prefixed motion verbs compared to their unprefixed counterparts. The proposal also explains the syntactic properties exhibited by verbs when prefixed by different prefixes. I offer a unified treatment of path structure and event structure and suggest that directional prepositions and directional prefixes are semantically identical and originate in the extended PP. The differences between them are due to the syntactic structure in which they participate.


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