Quantificational noun phrase

From Glottopedia
Revision as of 13:22, 20 February 2009 by Wohlgemuth (talk | contribs) (utrecht !?)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
STUB
CAT This article needs proper categorization. You can help Glottopedia by categorizing it
Please do not remove this block until the problem is fixed.


Quantificational noun phrase is a noun phrase which in LF moves into an A-bar position, binding its trace the way an operator binds a variable.

Example

if sentence (i)a means that for every girl it is the case that he gave her a book, its LF looks like (i)b where the quantificational noun phrase every girl is moved into an A-bar position, leaving behind a variable x and taking scope over a book, and is decomposed into the 'quantifier' every x and its restriction x a girl.

 (i) a  he gave a book to every girl
     b  [[every x, x a girl] [he gave a book to x]]
 

Links

Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics