Adjectival predicates in finite and non-finite clauses
Ekaterina A. Lyutikova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia; lyutikova2008@gmail.com
Abstract:
The paper explores the distribution of various adjectival predicates (short form adjectives, long form adjectives in the nominative or instrumental case and passive participles) in Russian finite and non-finite clauses. Two factors turn out to determine the availability of adjectival predicates: (i) the type of the subject (overt DP vs. A-trace vs. PRO) and (ii) the case feature of the subject (nominative vs. other cases). Crucially, adjectival predicates differ as to the licensing factors: short form adjectives require that their subject (overt DP, A-trace or PRO) be nominative whereas nominative long form adjectives are only licit if their subject is a nominative overt DP or an A-trace of a nominative DP, but not a (nominative) PRO. Including adjectival passive into this picture gives rise to further discrepancies: the long form of the passive participle cannot form a passive predicate of a finite clause but is licit as such a predicate in non-finite clauses. The paper provides a formal analysis of the distribution of adjectival predicates, which relies on the following assumptions: (i) the categorial contrast of short and long forms; (ii) the syntactically represented opposition of control and raising; and (iii) PRO’s ability to receive the case feature via case assignment by complementizer or case transmission from the controller.
For citation:
Lyutikova E. A. Adjectival predicates in finite and non-finite clauses. Voprosy Jazykoznanija, 2024, 6: 7–31.
Acknowledgements:
This research is supported by Russian Science Foundation, RSF project No. 22-18-00037 “Parametric model of agreement in the light of experimental data” realized at Lomonosov Moscow State University.