Abstract

This paper questions the logic behind the presence and the working of the EPP-feature in Polish dual copula clauses (henceforth, DCCs) with the pronominal copula to, the verbal copula być ‘to be’, and two nominative 3rd person DPs, as represented in Bondaruk (2019). The criticism follows from: (i) – Chomsky’s (2000, 2001) downward Agree operation; (ii) – the view that the predicator encodes the predication relation between the pre-copular subject and the post-copular predicate; (iii) – selective multiple Agree, whereby the satisfaction of the EPP- and uφ-features is divorced. Adopting (i)–(iii), Bondaruk’s scrutiny allows either the pre- or the post-copular DP to occupy SpecTP, thereby accounting for DCCs’ agreement and configurational patterns, but, simultaneously, suffering from theoretical shortcomings it creates. We argue for a simpler satisfaction of the subject requirement which does not rely on the troublesome EPP-feature, but is motivated formally by the relation between T and the higher DP. We derive this requirement by following Zeiljstra’s (2012) upward Agree which only takes place once interpretable features c-command uninterpretable features, and Rothstein’s (2004) approach which is based on a neo-Davidsonian event semantics and which argues that be and its complement form a complex predicate, separated from the pre-copular DP both semantically and syntactically.

Highlights

  • Biberauer and Roberts 2010; Rafał Jurczyk / Linguistics Beyond And Within 7 (2021), 33-57 considered from various standpoints, it is usually conflated with syntactic attributes

  • We end up with two φ-features Agree relations which serve different formal needs. We surmise that these two relations are necessitated formally because dual copula clauses (DCCs) feature two nominative 3rd person DPs which are both potential subjects expected to engage in operations that yield ‘subject effects’ i.e., SpecTP-movement and subject-verb agreement

  • This paper shows that the satisfaction of the EPP/subject requirement in Polish DCCs as based on downward and selective multiple Agree, the relational notion of predication and the EPPfeature is formally and semantically untenable

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Summary

Introduction1 2

Originating in early 1980’s (Chomsky 1981, 1982), the Extended Projection Principle (henceforth, EPP) requires each clause to have a subject (Svenonius 2002: 9).3 Initially

Abbreviations used in the paper
General remarks on dual copula clauses10
The EPP-requirement in general
The EPP-requirement in DCCs
The EPP in DCCs: A revised formal account
Concluding remarks
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