What is it about?
This paper argues that the Polish noun-pronoun asymmetry in which the intensifier sam ‘self’ precedes nouns and follows pronominals is not a simple case of configuration in the DP, whereby pronouns, unlike nominals, target D for referential reasons (cf. Rutkowski 2002, 2012). Such viewpoints, in the case of Polish, are unfortunate because they appear to underlyingly work on and draw from the syntax of nominal projections characteristic of English or Italian i.e., languages with articles. We show that the asymmetry pertains to various semantic interpretations of sam, the different semantic specification of nominals and pronominals, and the flexible word order property. What we need, therefore, is a broader clausal perspective coupled with necessary remarks on the abovementioned issues. Thus, rather than employing the DP-hypothesis, we assume two cornerstone phenomena i.e. flexible word order and rich agreement to be crucial here as they facilitate syntactic options like focalisation or topicalisation which manifest discourse information and in which sam functions as a focus or topic particle (cf. Constantinou 2014). These contexts are held typical of the asymmetry, thereby making it an interplay between semantic properties of nominal/pronominal expressions and organisation of discourse information that syntax makes available.
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Why is it important?
This paper shows that the so-called noun-pronoun asymmetry is not a simple DP-internal phenomenon related exclusively to the determiner/nominal domain, but a much more complex issue pertaining to Information-Structural considerations on the one hand, and the status of pronouns as contextually bound logical variables on the other.
Perspectives
This scrutiny shows that a more promising and, in fact, the only theoretically/empirically adequate treatment of the Polish noun-pronoun asymmetry in which the intensifier sam ‘self’ precedes nouns and follows pronominals, must necessarily avoid comparisons with the syntax of nominal projections characteristic of English or Italian i.e., languages with articles.
Ph.D Rafał Sławomir Jurczyk
University of Opole
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This page is a summary of: Noun/pronoun asymmetry in Polish: Against the nominal perspective and the DP-hypothesis, Poznan Studies in Contemporary Linguistics, March 2020, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1515/psicl-2020-0002.
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