Abstract

Italian is a pro drop language, since it allows subject drop and subject inversion. The pro-drop parameter is fixed early on (Orfitelli,2008), but both grammatical and informational factors might regulate the distribution of overt clausal subjects. On the grammatical side, the verb class influences the distribution of overt subjects: overt subjects in Italian are more likely to be found with unaccusative verbs (Lorusso, Caprin & Guasti 2005). On the informational side, 1st and 2nd person pronouns are more likely to e dropped than 3rd person NPs because the latter are more informative (Serratrice, 2005): 1st and 2nd ab ne recovered by the discourse, while 3rd persons are totally event anchored and have to be identified referentially within the linguistic stimuli. The parametric differences encoded in the lexical items, for example the unaccusative vs unergative distinction for verbs or the person ‘informative’ morphology, influence the subject drop in Italian: we propose a Lexical Parametrization account (Manzini & Wexler 1987) for subject drop in Italian, since the characteristic of lexical items influence the likelihood of appearance of an overt syntactic structure. Furthermore the distribution of indefinite postverbal subjects found just with unaccusatives in early stages of acquisition of Italian (Lorusso, 2014) confirms that the lexical characteristics of both the subject NPs and the verbs (in a subset relation with other NPs and verbs respectively) determine the parametric overt variation across the different stage of the acquisition of Italian, as Lexical Parametrization predicts.

Highlights

  • In this paper we will show that the distribution of overt subjects in Italian is linked to the morpho-syntactic features of the lexical elements found in each sentence

  • The parametric differences encoded in the lexical items, for example the unaccusative vs unergative distinction for verbs or the person ‘informative’ morphology, influence the subject drop in Italian: we propose a Lexical Parametrization account (Manzini & Wexler 1987) for subject drop in Italian, since the characteristic of lexical items influence the likelihood of appearance of an overt syntactic structure

  • In this paper we accounted for the distribution of early and adult null subjects following the statement of the Lecial Parametrization Hypothesis (Manzini and Wexler, 1987) The lexical parameterization hypothesis states that: “values of a parameter are associated not with a particular grammar but with particular lexical items” (Manzini and Wexler 1987: 424) by children

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Summary

Introduction

In this paper we will show that the distribution of overt subjects in Italian is linked to the morpho-syntactic features of the lexical elements found in each sentence. Overt subjects in Italian are more likely to be found with unaccusative verbs (Lorusso, Caprin & Guasti 2005) in postverbal position and with 3rd person indefinite subject (Lorusso 2014) This pattern of distribution of overt subjects seems to be generated by the parametric variation across the lexical items that are inserted in the morpho-syntactic derivation (Chomsky 2001, Borer 1984, Manzini & Wexler 1987, Wexler & Manzini, 1987). We will show that the the person (1st and 2nd person vs 3rd person) and the definiteness of the subject DPs play a central role in the appearance of overt postverbal subjects

Pro Drop Parameter
Null Subjects and Verb Classes
Subject Position
Person Morphology and Overt Subject
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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