We present an account of why disjoint reference effects obtain in verbal but not in adjectival passives. Passives in child language are independently argued to always be adjectival, which allows us to use a natural experiment in child grammar that is not available in the adult grammar: predicting the lack of a disjoint reference effect in even those passives that prima facie seem verbal. We conduct our discussion against the background of the difference between adjectival and verbal passives in general. Our account is based on (grammatical) Implicature Theory. Since the initiator in the semantic representation of adjectival passives stays at a kind level, it cannot introduce a discourse referent, hence cannot trigger a disjointness implicature, unlike the initiator in verbal passives (Gehrke 2013, 2015). We show in two experiments that children’s passives do not exhibit disjoint reference, unlike adults’ verbal passives, even though children have no trouble computing disjointness implicatures elsewhere. Our contribution thus confirms with a novel kind of evidence the syntactic nature of young children’s difficulty with verbal passives. It offers a new perspective on the external argument difference between verbal and adjectival passives based on Reinhart’s (2016) Theta System, while also offering additional evidence for a grammatical, rather than general pragmatic, theory of implicatures.
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February 26 2024
On Realizing External Arguments: A Syntactic and Implicature Theory of the Disjointness Effect for Passives in Adult and Child Grammar
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Loes Koring,
Loes Koring
Centre for Language Sciences, Department of Linguistics, Macquarie University, [email protected]
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Eric Reuland,
Eric Reuland
Institute of Language Sciences, Utrecht University, [email protected]
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Nina Sangers,
Nina Sangers
Faculty of Humanities, Language, Literature and Communication, Free University Amsterdam, [email protected]
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Kenneth Wexler
Kenneth Wexler
Department of Brain and Cognitive Science and Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, MIT, [email protected]
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Loes Koring
Centre for Language Sciences, Department of Linguistics, Macquarie University, [email protected]
Eric Reuland
Institute of Language Sciences, Utrecht University, [email protected]
Nina Sangers
Faculty of Humanities, Language, Literature and Communication, Free University Amsterdam, [email protected]
Kenneth Wexler
Department of Brain and Cognitive Science and Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, MIT, [email protected]
Online ISSN: 1530-9150
Print ISSN: 0024-3892
© 2023 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.
2023
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For a full description of the license, please visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode.
Linguistic Inquiry 1–25.
Citation
Loes Koring, Eric Reuland, Nina Sangers, Kenneth Wexler; On Realizing External Arguments: A Syntactic and Implicature Theory of the Disjointness Effect for Passives in Adult and Child Grammar. Linguistic Inquiry 2024; doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/ling_a_00520
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