Manner and Result in the Roots of Verbal Meaning 论文

2012Linguistic Inquiry引用 308
Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic VariationNatural Language Processing TechniquesLanguage and cultural evolution

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Linguistic Inquiry
发表日期
2012-07-01
发表年份
2012

关键词

Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic VariationNatural Language Processing TechniquesLanguage and cultural evolution

摘要

Rappaport Hovav and Levin (2010) argue that verbs fall into (at least) two classes: result verbs (e.g., break) and manner verbs (e.g., run). No verb encodes both manner and result simultaneously, a truth-conditional fact that Rappaport Hovav and Levin argue follows from how verb meanings are composed at the level of event structure. However, a key issue in verifying this claim is isolating truth-conditional diagnostics for manner and result. We develop and review a number of such diagnostics and show that there are verbs that encode both meanings together, counterexemplifying their truth-conditional complementarity. However, using evidence from scopal adverbs, we argue that when the meanings occur together, they are encoded in a single, undecomposable manner+result root at event structure. This fact validates complementarity as a fact about how many and what types of roots may occur in an event structure, though it also argues for a richer typology of roots than is typically assumed, including those encoding manner and result simultaneously.