Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Semantics of Predicational Adverbs
- 3 The Scopal Basis of Adverb Licensing
- 4 Arguments for Right-Adjunction
- 5 Noncanonical Orders and the Structure of VP
- 6 Event-Internal Adjuncts
- 7 Adjunct Licensing in the AuxRange
- 8 Adjuncts in Clause-Initial Projections
- 9 Conclusions and Prospects
- Notes
- References
- Name Index
- Languages Index
- Subject Index
2 - The Semantics of Predicational Adverbs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Semantics of Predicational Adverbs
- 3 The Scopal Basis of Adverb Licensing
- 4 Arguments for Right-Adjunction
- 5 Noncanonical Orders and the Structure of VP
- 6 Event-Internal Adjuncts
- 7 Adjunct Licensing in the AuxRange
- 8 Adjuncts in Clause-Initial Projections
- 9 Conclusions and Prospects
- Notes
- References
- Name Index
- Languages Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Introduction
Predicational Adverbs
Predicational adverbs are those that are not quantificational (as are frequently and daily, for example), that represent gradable predicates taking (at least) events or propositions as their arguments, and that in English are almost always composed of an adjective plus -ly, such as probably, amazingly, similarly, cleverly, reluctantly, or loudly. Previous studies of predicational adverbs, dating back at least as far as Greenbaum 1969, have tried to account for their syntax by dividing them into classes and then specifying the range of positions where each class may occur, most often correlating this range with some aspect of meaning. Thus Jackendoff (1972), for example, proposes semantic interpretation rules for the three classes represented in (2.1).
(2.1) Jackendoff's (1972) main predicational adverb classes:
a. manner: loudly
b. subject-oriented: cleverly, reluctantly
c. speaker-oriented: probably, clearly, amazingly, frankly
In Jackendoff's theory, each of these classes must be interpreted by a specific semantic rule corresponding to the constituent containing the adverb, such as VP for manner adverbs. If an adverb is attached to a constituent where the appropriate rule cannot apply, it receives no interpretation and the sentence is ungrammatical.
In this chapter I propose an account of the semantics of predicational adverbs that is very much in this spirit.
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- Information
- The Syntax of Adjuncts , pp. 41 - 91Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001