A unified analysis of French causatives

Authors

  • Harry J. Tily Department of Linguistics, Stanford University
  • Ivan A. Sag Department of Linguistics, Stanford University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21248/hpsg.2006.19

Abstract

The treatment of French causatives and pronominal affixes outlined in Miller and Sag (1997) and Abeillé et al. (1998) is notable for its comprehensive coverage and analytic detail, but it relies on a number of ad hoc features and types that have little empirical justification. We sketch a new treatment of the same data set, which eliminates multiple lexical entries for the causative, as well as a number of other undesirable analytic devices. Our account builds on a long-standing observation that seeming irregularities in the system of case assignment to the causee of faire are not in fact exceptional, but determined by the general case assignment behavior of transitive verbs. This generalization, first incorporated into an HPSG analysis by Bratt (1990), was abandoned in subsequent HPSG work that sought to expand the coverage of French beyond that of Bratt's analysis. Our goal here is to show that broad coverage need not come at the expense of linguistically significant generalizations.

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Published

2006-10-18

How to Cite

Tily, Harry J. & Sag, Ivan A. 2006. A unified analysis of French causatives. Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar 339–359. (doi:10.21248/hpsg.2006.19) (https://proceedings.hpsg.xyz/article/view/656) (Accessed April 24, 2024.)