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12 - Licensing heads

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2011

Hilda Koopman
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics, UCLA
David Lightfoot
Affiliation:
University of Maryland, College Park
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Summary

Introduction

The principles governing the structure of syntactic representations can be seen as a collection of licensing conditions that categories of various types have to meet. Arguments, for example, need to be licensed by theta-role assignment, overt NPs by Case, small pro by being identified, negative polarity items by negative elements, anaphors by being appropriately bound to antecedents, expletive pronouns by being replaced by an NP at LF. Licensing conditions are stated in terms of a number of primitive features (nominal or verbal, phonetic or covert, etc.) and relations (government, c-command, Spec-head agreement, coindexing, etc.).

In recent work, Sportiche (1992) has suggested that an entire set of licensing conditions could be reduced to one, namely Spec-head licensing. As illustration, consider two major cases of syntactic XP-movement: wh-movement and NP movement. They represent movement to Spec positions (Spec of CP and Spec of AGRsP, Spec of AGRoP). This type of movement represents a way to license particular XPs, either because the XP is a wh-phrase and has to be licensed in Spec of CP, or because the XP needs Case. Spec positions thus typically function as “licensing” positions, and (overt or covert) movement represents the means to fulfill the licensing requirement: a particular XP is licit because it “counts” as being in the Spec position of a particular (licensing) head.

This general idea brings together a number of results from recent work that has established the privileged status of Spec positions as licensing positions.

Type
Chapter
Information
Verb Movement , pp. 261 - 296
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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