Abstract
This paper investigates clausal complements of factive and non-factive predicates in English, with particular focus on the distribution of overt and null that complementizers. Most studies on this topic assume that both overt and null that clauses have the same underlying structure and predict that these clauses show (nearly) the same syntactic distribution, contrary to fact: while the complementizer that is freely dropped in non-factive clausal complements, it is required in factive clausal complements by many native speakers of English. To account for several differences between factive and non-factive clausal complements, including the distribution of the overt and null complementizers, we propose that overt that clauses and null that clauses have different underlying structures responsible for their different syntactic behavior. Adopting Rizzi’s (1997) split CP (Complementizer Phrase) structure with two C heads, Force and Finiteness, we suggest that null that clauses are FinPs (Finiteness Phrases) under both factive and non-factive predicates, whereas overt that clauses have an extra functional layer above FinP, lexicalizing either the head Force under non-factive predicates or the light demonstrative head d under factive predicates. These three different underlying structures successfully account for different syntactic patterns found between overt and null that clauses in various contexts.
Highlights
When a verb takes a clausal complement, it may be headed by an overt lexical complementizer (COMP), which is obligatory in many languages in the world
Building on the above-mentioned views that (a) the structure of overt that clauses is more complex than the structure of null that clauses, (b) factive complements are nominal in nature, and (c) the structure of non-factive that complements is richer than the structure of factive that complements, we propose the following underlying structures of clausal complements of non-factive and factive predicates with an overt COMP and a null COMP
We have proposed that factive clausal complements and non-factive clausal complements have different underlying structures; while factive complements are dPs whose head is lexicalized by a weak demonstrative that, non-factive complements are either ForcePs or FinPs
Summary
Department of Linguistics, University of Geneva, 24 rue du Général-Dufour, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland University Priority Research Program (URPP) Language and Space, University of Zurich, Freiestrasse 16, 8032 Zurich, Switzerland Received: 28 February 2017; Accepted: 16 August 2017; Published: 4 September 2017
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