Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2011
Introduction
In this paper, I will examine a very influential analysis of the structure of the English and French auxiliary systems, an analysis which posits verb raising or movement as a central device. The authors' assumptions about very basic aspects of linguistic structure lead inevitably to this description. I, in fact, am more interested in these assumptions than in whether or not verb movement is a device in the repertoire of syntactic description, as it surely is, for these assumptions are widely shared and reasonable ones, but I think incorrect.
The analysis is Emonds' (1978) and Pollock's (1989). The reasonable assumption lying behind the analysis is that adverbs, and other modifiers, such as negation, occupy fixed positions, so that any observed alternation of their positioning with respect to verbs must therefore be due to verb movement. What is of most interest in this context is to determine more precisely what the rules of distribution and interpretation for these elements are. I will reject the idea that there are universal “slots” in which adverbs of various kinds can appear, one slot for each type of adverb; nor do I think that adverbs are distributed in the same way in different languages. The modes of modification are more various than that. On the other hand, I do think there is a simple elegant set of notions of scope and modification which gets the adverbs right, interacting in the popular way with language-wide parameter settings.
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