LINGUIST List 28.2966

Fri Jul 07 2017

Diss: The syntax of Objects: Agree and Differential Object Marking

Editor for this issue: Sarah Robinson <srobinsonlinguistlist.org>


Date: 07-Jul-2017
From: Miguel Rodríguez-Mondoñedo <mmondonpucp.edu.pe>
Subject: The syntax of Objects: Agree and Differential Object Marking
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Institution: University of Connecticut
Program: Department of Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2007

Author: Miguel Rodríguez-Mondoñedo

Dissertation Title: The syntax of Objects: Agree and Differential Object Marking

Dissertation URL: http://digitalcommons.uconn.edu/dissertations/AAI3276641/

Linguistic Field(s): Syntax

Subject Language(s): Spanish (spa)

Dissertation Director:
Željko Bošković
Jonathan Bobaljik
Diane Lillo-Martin
Jairo Nunes

Dissertation Abstract:

This dissertation investigates the nature of Differential Object Marking (DOM), using Spanish as a case study. It proposes that DOM arises from an interaction between case and agreement; in particular, from the suggestion that Agree is sensitive to the feature specification of probes and goals. Based on the observation that Spanish Existential Constructions (SEC) have accusative objects and that nominals marked for [person] (for instance John or him) are not allowed as SEC-objects, not even with list-readings, I propose that haber-sentences have a νP, which accounts for the presence of accusative. I argue that the small ν has only [number]. If a nominal does not have [person], the probe ν will be complete with respect to its goal, then it will be able to value the [case] feature of the nominal. But if the nominal does have [person], it cannot check case against small ν, because ϕ-incomplete probes cannot value the case feature of ϕ-complete probes. Significantly, ϕ-complete nominals in SEC cannot be rescued by using A, the element that generally marks specific and animate objects in Spanish (DOM). Based on this, I extend the analysis to all transitive verbs; this means that Spanish ν has only [number] and no [person]: as a result, no [person] nominal can value its Case against ν. Hence [person] nominals must move out to avoid being spelled-out with an unvalued feature. In transitive constructions, [person] nominals move via [Spec, νP] to an additional position (a dative head, which explains the A). This means the incompleteness of ν is not a marginal aspect of SEC, but a core property of Spanish νP, and perhaps of all DOM languages. This dissertation also offers a thorough exploration of specificity and animacy in Spanish DOM, and examines several issues with respect to DOM that have been difficult to solve, proposing an account of these issues that naturally fits the system developed in the dissertation.


Page Updated: 07-Jul-2017