Keywords

rationale clause coreference, PRO control and binding, syntactic vs. semantic objections

Abstract

After (1) or (2) we can use (3), a rationale clause, to mean (4). We then mean that those who acquire a pitcher are the traders of the outfielders.

(1) The team traded away two outfielders

(2) Two outfielders were traded away

(3) PRO to acquire a pitcher.

(4) because then the trader might acquire a pitcher.

On grammatical accounts, this indicates a relation between two arguments that ensures their coreference, for any assignment of values to variables. PRO in (3), for example, would be related in this way to an argument that is linked to the role of trader in either (1) or (2). Such accounts have good motives, sketched in §3. But in this paper we make two objections, one syntactic and one semantic. The syntactic objection comes from remote control, as in (5). We can use (5) just like (3), again to mean (4) (Higgins 1973, Dowty 1989, Sag & Pollard 1991, Williams 2015). Yet in this case, we will argue in §4, there can be no local binder for PRO, when there isn’t one audible.

Original Publication Citation

Williams, A. & Green, J.J. Why control of PRO in rationale clauses is not a relation between arguments. In A. Lamont & K. Tetzloff (Eds.), Proceedings of NELS 47 (Volume 3, pp.233–246). Amherst MA: GLSA.

Document Type

Conference Paper

Publication Date

2017

Publisher

Proceedings of NELS 47

College

Humanities

Department

Linguistics

University Standing at Time of Publication

Assistant Professor

Included in

Linguistics Commons

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