Download PDF

Linguistic Inquiry

Publication date: 2015-01-01
Volume: 46 Pages: 625 - 655
Publisher: MIT Press

Author:

Van Craenenbroeck, Jeroen
De Belder, Marijke

Keywords:

Social Sciences, Linguistics, Language & Linguistics, roots, Merge, Vocabulary Insertion, Distributed Morphology, 1702 Cognitive Sciences, 2004 Linguistics, Languages & Linguistics, 4704 Linguistics

Abstract:

© 2015 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The main goal of this article is to show that four properties of roots can be derived in a principled manner from the theory of Merge. The properties in question are the following: (a) roots have no grammatical features, (b) roots have no syntactic category, (c) roots are defined structurally rather than lexically, and (d) roots are dominated by functional material (rather than the other way around). We argue that the first Merge operation in each cyclic domain creates a radically empty structural position at the foot of the structure in which a root can be inserted at the level of Vocabulary Insertion. The four abovementioned properties of roots can then be shown to follow straightforwardly from this theory.