matrix subject
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2021 ◽  
pp. 149-159
Author(s):  
Ida Toivonen

The Germanic languages have a number of different verbs of perception such as ‘see’, ‘hear’, and ‘look like’, and these verbs can appear in different syntactic frames. The literature on these verbs point to many similarities and also interesting and subtle differences between verbs and constructions. This chapter specifically focuses on English ‘look like’ and its Swedish counterpart ‘se ut som’. Specifically, copy-raising examples like ‘Mia looked like she was sleeping’ are compared to expletive examples such as ‘It looked like Mia was sleeping’. A comparison between new psycholinguistic study of Swedish and similar recent studies on Swedish and English lends support to the hypothesis that copy-raising and expletive examples are more similar to each other in English than they are in Swedish: in Swedish the embedded pronoun is less likely to be interpreted as co-referential with the matrix subject.


Linguistics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Łukasz Jędrzejowski

Abstract In this article, I examine the distributional properties, emergence conditions, and development of the habitual verbal head pflegen ‘use(d) to’ in the history of German. Synchronically, I argue that Present-day German possesses subject to subject raising verbs and that they can all be brought down to a common denominator: They allow promotion of the embedded subject into the matrix subject position (= A-movement). However, at the same time I argue that German subject to subject raising verbs differ and that their heterogeneity follows from their semantics. What all this boils down to is that German subject to subject raising verbs do not form a uniform class, neither semantically nor syntactically. As for pflegen, I account for its syntactic peculiarities referring to its functional status, i.e., the status of being a habitual head. Diachronically, I show that pflegen grammaticalized into an AspHAB-head in the transition from Old High German (750–1050) to Middle High German (1050–1350) and that this grammaticalization process restricted the way it behaves in Present-day German.


SPE Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Pål Østebø Andersen

Summary This work studies 1D steady-state flow of gas from compressible shale matrix subject to water blocking toward a neighboring fracture. Water blocking is a capillary end effect causing wetting phase (e.g., water) to accumulate near the transition from matrix to fracture. Hydraulic fracturing is essential for economical shale gas production. Water is frequently used as fracturing fluid, but its accumulation in the matrix can reduce gas mobility and production rate. Gas transport is considered at a defined pressure drop. The model accounts for apparent permeability (slip), compressibility of gas and shale, permeability reduction, saturation tortuosity (reduced relative permeability upon compaction), and multiphase flow parameters like relative permeability and capillary pressure, which depend on wettability. The behavior of gas flow rate and distributions of gas saturation, pressure, and permeability subject to different conditions and the stated mechanisms is explored. Water blockage reduces gas relative permeability over a large zone and reduces the gas flow rate. Despite gas flowing, strong capillary forces sustain mobile water over the entire system. Reducing drawdown gave lower driving force and higher resistance (by water blockage) for gas flow. The results show that 75% reduction of drawdown made the gas flow rate a couple orders of magnitude lower compared to if there was no blockage. The impact was most severe in more water-wetsystems. The blockage caused most of the pressure drop to occur near the outlet. High pressure in the rest of the system reduced effects from gas decompression, matrix compression, and slip-enhanced permeability, whereas rapid gradients in all these effects occurred near the outlet. Gas decompression resulted in an approximately 10 times higher Darcy velocity and pressure gradient near the outlet compared to inlet, which contributed to removing blockage, but the added resistance reduced the gas production rate. Similarly, higher gas Corey exponent associated gas flow with higher pressure drop. The result was less blockage but lower gas production. Slip increased permeability, especially toward the outlet, and contributed to increase in gas production by 16%. Significant matrix compression was associated with permeability reduction and increased Corey exponent in some examples. These effects reduced production and shifted more of the pressure drop toward the outlet. Upstream pressure was more uniform, and less compression and permeability reduction were seen overall compared to a system without water blockage.


2021 ◽  
pp. 192-215
Author(s):  
Yuko Otsuka

Apparent raising (AR) constructions in Tongan resemble raising constructions in that the thematic subject of the embedded clause seems to occur in the matrix subject position. Unlike regular raising, however, Tongan AR shows characteristics of A-bar movement such as long-distance dependency, sensitivity to islands, and syntactic ergativity. This chapter argues that Tongan AR involves three operations: (a) topic movement of a DP to the embedded [Spec, C], (b) cancelation of the previous valuation of the case feature on the DP in [Spec, C], and (c) subsequent case valuation under Agree with the matrix v. The proposed analysis calls for a parametric adjustment to the activity condition to allow for multiple case valuation: in languages like Tongan, a DP located at the edge of a phase not only remains active, but the valuation of its case feature gets undone upon completion of the CP phase.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis Miguel Toquero-Pérez

Abstract Extraction and subextraction tend to receive separate attention in syntax, which leads to the assumption that they should be analyzed independently, even though they both illustrate an asymmetry between subjects and objects. By looking at various phenomena in English, German, Spanish and Norwegian I propose that this parallel behavior is not accidental, but that there is a previously unnoticed generalization: subextraction is allowed iff extraction is possible and the target of subextraction is not an indirect object. I propose that a revised version of Spec-to-Spec antilocality (Erlewine 2016) is necessary: movement of and out of an XP must cross a Projection Line (PL) (Brody 1998), i.e. the set of all projections of a head. This version of antilocality can derive Freezing effects, Huang’s (1982) CED, and their exceptions; and Comp-trace effects and their neutralization, extending them to subextraction. However, antilocality on its own cannot derive the extraction-subextraction asymmetry in indirect objects. I propose that the Principle of Minimal Compliance (PMC) (Richards 1998) can suspend antilocality if agree between a probe and a goal has happened. The version adopted here will allow extraction of the whole XP, but disallow extraction of its specifier due to the lack of an agree relation. Antilocality and the PMC combined also make the right predictions in other domains such as the lack of do-support in matrix subject questions and A-movement of the subject in declarative clauses, providing evidence that antilocality is a constraint that should apply to (at least) both A and A′-movement.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 69
Author(s):  
Lelly Nur Rachmawati ◽  
Yus Mochamad Cholily ◽  
Zukhrufurrohmah Zukhrufurrohmah

Student mistakes in communicating mathematical ideas are still widely practiced. Therefore, it is essential to analyze students' mathematical communication errors in solving mathematical problems so that learning planning can be better. This study aims to describe students' mathematics communication errors in solving the higher-order thinking skill's problems in linear algebra and matrix subject. The type of research is a qualitative descriptive study. They were 155 students as subject research. The data analysis started by collecting students' answers and then grouped them according to mathematics communication skills criteria. Later identified and analyzed the errors made by students of each mathematics communication criteria. The results showed that mathematical communication errors on the indicators of writing mathematical situations were concept errors and principle errors. The declaring idea's mathematical communication error is a concept error, a principle error, and an operation error. Furthermore, mathematical communication errors on the indicator state the results of solving-problem using the language itself is a concept error and operator error.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 90-112
Author(s):  
Xiaoshi Hu

Abstract Causatives and passives are two different types of syntactic constructions, but their interaction can be observed cross-linguistically. By investigating the causative-passive correlation in Chinese, English and French, we try to offer an appropriate account for the causative-passive correlation by specifying its necessary conditions. We argue that the constructions which involve the causative-passive correlation must be mono-phasal, and the embedded object can be co-referred to the matrix subject by syntactic movement.


Author(s):  
Asli Göksel ◽  
Balkiz Öztürk

This chapter investigates the syntactic properties of the prominent possessor constructions in Turkish. Possessors of possessive phrases become prominent only in a set of well-defined constructions, namely, from within an adverbial clause, typically containing a body part idiom. These idioms have the structure NP-POSS V, where N is a noun of inalienable possession, V is an unaccusative verb, and the idiom itself is paraphraseable as a psych-verb. The chapter analyses the syntactic structure of these idioms and proposes that the subject position in the adverbial clause is occupied by PRO. PRO is in the c-command domain of the matrix subject and is the locus of the experiencer of the unaccusative verb. The possessor is coindexed with this experiencer via its morphosyntactic features.


Author(s):  
Yi Zheng

This paper aims to investigate how Chinese learners of European Portuguese as second language acquire backward anaphora in this language, analyzing the interpretation of overt pronoun in left-dislocated temporal adverbial adjunct. Two experiments were administered to test if the syntactic position and the proximity of antecedent are main factors to determine the interpretation by the native speakers of Portuguese and the Chinese learners, as well as if the learners are influenced by their first language. The first test illustrates that in Chinese the native speakers may fluctuate between three possible interpretations in backward anaphora structures, namely the matrix subject, matrix object and the antecedent in context. The second test demonstrates that the native speakers of European Portuguese also fluctuate between the three interpretations, while the Chinese learners do not tend to accept an antecedent in the context. The test also shows that the C1 level learners are more likely to accept the matrix subject as the antecedent of the embedded overt pronoun than the B2 level learners.


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