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Domains within Words and their meanings: a case study. Elena Anagnostopoulou & Yota Samioti University of Crete [email protected], [email protected] To appear in: Alexiadou, A., H. Borer & F. Schäfer (Eds.) The syntax of Roots and the roots of Syntax. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1. Introduction1 The goal of this paper is to investigate the conditions under which idiosyncratic meaning arises in word formation. More specifically, we investigate the hypothesis put forth in Arad (2003, 2005) and Marantz (2001, 2007) that idiosyncratic meaning derives from locality conditions on the interpretation of roots. This hypothesis is stated in (1): (1) The Marantz / Arad Hypothesis Roots are assigned an interpretation in the context of the first category assigning head/ phase head merged with them, which is then fixed throughout the derivation We test (1) in the domain of Greek verbal adjectives and adjectival participles which provide extensive evidence for attachment below vs. above higher heads (i.e. little v, Voice) of the adjectivizing/participial suffixes –tos and –menos, respectively. Our investigation leads to the following results: (i) Affixes serving as verbalizers and the little v head contributing eventiveness cannot be collapsed. Greek verbal adjectives are shown to be semantically and syntactically small (i.e. they do not have event implications, a semantic property correlating with the fact that they do not support adverbs and other modifiers), and yet they may contain verbalizers inside the adjectivizing suffix -tos. This leads us to propose that there are two ways of interpreting the Arad/Marantz hypothesis, depending on whether we take (morphological) verbalizers or (abstract) eventivizing heads to qualify as the relevant phase heads in (1). (ii) If we look at the interpretation of an unspecified root, as suggested by Arad (2003, 2005) on the basis of Multiple Contextualized Meaning (MCM) in Hebrew, then Greek provides some support for the view that specified meaning is indeed determined at the point of categorization. Even though many Greek roots have a rather fixed meaning, unlike Hebrew, there are also roots whose meaning is unspecified, similarly to Hebrew. Interestingly, the presence of a verbalizing head in verbal adjectives formed on the basis of the latter type of roots serves as a context determining their interpretation (similarly to prefixes with latinate roots in English and Ancient Greek roots in Greek), as expected under Arad’s hypothesis. More specifically, we propose that roots fall into basic ontological types 1 Different versions of this paper have been presented at the 32nd GLOW Colloquium (University of Nantes, April 15-18 2009), the Roots Workshop (University of Stuttgart, June 2009) and the Workshop on Linguistic Interfaces (University of Ulster, December 2-4 2010). We would like to thank the audiences for questions, suggestions and discussions, especially Asaf Bachrach, Orin Percus, Peter Svenonius, Gertjan Postma, Danny Fox, Alec Marantz, David Embick, Andrew Koontz Garboden, Hagit Borer, Lisa Travis, Christina Sevdali, Raffi Folli, and Heidi Harley. Special thanks to Winfried Lechner, Artemis Alexiadou and Terje Lohndal for their comments. 1 naming events, things and states following Harley (2005). Roots must be classifiable in terms of this basic ontology. If they are not, a categorizing head serves to classify them. The classification itself makes them acquire what is sensed as fixed “meaning”, which is then retained throughout the derivation. (iii) If we look at idiomatic interpretations, as suggested by Marantz on the basis of idiomatic interpretations of adjectival passive participles vs. compositional interpretations of verbal passive participles in English, then (1) is not supported by the Greek data. Verbal adjectives involving affix attachment below v (whether v is taken to be a verbalizer or an eventivizer) as well as participles showing affix attachment above v may both have idiomatic meanings, and there is no necessary correlation between the meaning of verbs and the meaning of participles which include a verbal head, contra Marantz (2001, 2007). On the other hand, there is strong evidence from various directions that the head which delimits the domain for idiomatic interpretations of adjectival participles and verbal adjectives in Greek is Voice, the little v head introducing the agent, as was proposed in earlier work by Marantz (1996, 1997). We conclude that the node that syntactically projects an agent serves as a boundary for special meanings of idioms at the word level, similarly to what has been claimed for idioms at the phrasal level. The paper is organized as follows. In section 2, we provide the necessary background on inner vs. outer affixation focusing on how this distinction has been related to the question of idiosyncratic interpretation. In section 3, we present an outline of the properties of Greek – menos participles and –tos verbal adjectives, investigating their architecture in connection to their syntax, semantics and morphology. We present evidence that morphological verbalizers should be dissociated from the abstract heads contributing eventiveness. This leads us to conclude that the categorizing head v (vC), which verbalizes an a-categorial root, cannot be collapsed with the eventivizing v head (vE), which functions as the BECOME/ RESULT/ FIENT operator identified in recent decomposition analyses. Finally, in section 4 we turn to the question of domains for idioms. We argue that neither the verbalizing head vC nor the eventivizing head vE serve as boundaries for special meanings; the relevant domain is defined by Voice, the head projecting an agent. 2. Background: two domains for word formation, inner and outer affixation. As is well known, there are two types of word formation, one forming words showing irregularities, such as paradigmatic gaps, non-predictable meaning, irregular forms, and one for morphologically productive, semantically transparent and morpho-phonologically predictable forms. In many theories, this difference has been linked to the hypothesis that there are two places for word formation: Lexicon vs. syntax (e.g. Wasow 1977, Dubinsky & Simango 1996, Horvath & Siloni 2008), derivation vs. inflection (e.g. Anderson 1982; Perlmutter 1988; Spencer 1991) level I vs. level II (e.g. Siegel 1979; Kiparsky 1982; Mohanan 1986). Adjectival/stative vs. verbal/eventive passive participles in languages like English have been widely assumed in the literature to present a paradigmatic case exemplifying the double nature of word formation. Stative/ adjectival participles may show special morphology, while eventive/ passive participles always show regular morphology: (2) a. b. The shaven man The man was shaved by John Moreover, stative participle formation is associated with idiosyncrasy in meaning, unlike verbal participle formation: 2 (3) a. b. The hung jury *The jury was being hung (#Someone hung the jury) In English and other languages the stative vs. eventive participle distinction correlates with a split between derivation and inflection (Wasow 1977, Marantz 2001, 2007; Horvath & Siloni 2008). Stative participles are adjectives and passive ones are verbs, as shown by “very” vs. “very much”-modification in (4) and (5). In English, “very” modifies exclusively adjectives and “very much” exclusively verbs, as indicated by the contrasts between (4b) vs. (4c) and (5b) vs. (5c), respectively. The fact that the stative participle respected is modified by “very” in (4a) presents evidence that it qualifies as an adjective. On the other hand, passive respected in (5a) is modified by very much qualifying as a verb. (4) (5) a. b. c. a. b. c. Your family was very respected John is very fond of your family *John is very much fond of your family Your family was very much respected by the neighbors John very much respects your family *John very respects your family Adjectival Verbal Wasow (1977) argued that the properties distinguishing adjectival from verbal participles may receive a principled explanation if the two participle types are formed in two different components of the grammar (an approach widely adopted since then;2 see Horvath & Siloni 2008 for a recent analysis along these lines). On this view, adjectival passives are formed in the lexicon, and they show idiosyncratic forms and meanings due to the fact that words in the lexicon have special listed properties. On the other hand, verbal passives are formed in syntax, the locus of regularity, productivity and compositionality, which in turn explains their transparency in form and meaning. For syntactic approaches to morphology such as Distributed Morphology (DM) or Borer (2005), properties traditionally attributed to lexical listing (e.g. categorization, argument structure) are reduced to mechanisms of the computational system. In such models, there can be no well-defined distinction between lexical and syntactic word formation. This raises the question of how the distinction between regular and irregular word formation can be derived. In order to capture this distinction, Marantz (2001, 2007) and Arad (2003, 2005) propose to reconstruct the ‘two places to build words” approach within the syntax, as ‘two domains for word formation’ (see also Embick 2010). More specifically, they propose that there are two domains for word formation delimited by a category-defining head, as shown in (6). Attachment of x directly to the root, as in (6a), leads to irregular word formation, while attachment above the category defining heads (little v, a, n), as in (6b), leads to regular word formation: (6) a. x 3 Root x b. x 3 n, v, a 3 Root n, v, a 2 But cf. Strong Lexicalist approaches such as Levin & Rappaport’s (1986) who argue that all participles are formed in the lexicon, adjectival participles are formed by verbal ones via a category changing rule, and the properties distinguishing adjectival from verbal participles derive from their difference in category. See Dubinsky & Simango (1996) for evidence against this view and Marantz (2007) for discussion of Wasow’s analysis, as compared to Levin & Rappaport’s. 3 On this view, there is a split between “inner” and “outer” morphology, as defined in (7): (7) “Inner morphology” attaches to roots or complex constituents below the first little x (x={v,n,a}) node head (phase head) above the root. All morphology above the first x node is “outer morphology” including all “category changing” derivational morphology.” (Marantz 2007: 5; Marantz’s (3), (2)) The main properties associated with inner vs. outer affixation are summarized in Table 1: Table 1 Regularity Selection Inner Affixation Potential special form and special meaning Attaches inside morphology determining lexical category Outer Affixation Predictable form and predictable meaning May attach outside morphology determining lexical category According to these authors, phasehood provides the key towards understanding why there is an inner vs. outer split in word-formation. Assuming that category defining heads are phase heads in the sense of Chomsky (2000, 2001), they define cyclic domains leading to the semantic interpretation and phonological spell-out of the chunk of syntactic structure which includes the root or a more complex constituent plus the category determining head. Once such phase heads are merged, the structure is shipped off to PF and LF for pronunciation/ interpretation and from that point on, spell-out and interpretation cannot be altered. Moreover, further affixation cannot reach into properties of the Root. The empirical generalization this proposal is based on will be called here “the (non-)compositionality generalization” in (8): (8) The (non-)compositionality generalization When affixes attach directly to the root, idiosyncratic meanings may arise. When affixes attach outside category defining heads, the result is a meaning predictable from the meaning of the stem. Arad (2003, 2005) presents extensive evidence from Hebrew denominal verbs supporting (8) and the “inner” vs. “outer” architecture. 3. Greek –menos participles and –tos verbal adjectives: outer and inner architecture Greek has a rich set of adjectives/ participles based on verbs, ending in -tos and –menos.3 As has been argued for in Anagnostopoulou (2003) and Alexiadou & Anagnostopoulou (A&A 2008), –menos participles denote states resulting from prior events and are formed by outer cycle attachment (above vP or above VoiceP). On the other hand, -tos verbal adjectives lack event implications, a property taken by Anagnostopoulou (2003) and A&A (2008) to provide evidence for inner-cycle attachment. If this picture is correct, then -menos and –tos forms present an ideal empirical domain for testing the validity of the Marantz/Arad hypothesis (1), and the non-compositionality generalization in (8). Assuming (1) and (8), –menos participles 3 Νakas 1978, Setatos 1984, Lascaratou 1991, Lascaratou & Philippaki-Warburton 1984, Anastasiadi-Simeonidi 1994, Markantonatou et al. 1996, Kordoni 2002, Αnagnostopoulou 2003, Alexiadou & Anagnostopoulou 2008, Samioti 2008; in progress. 4 are expected to have a meaning predictable from the meaning of the corresponding verbs, while –tos forms are expected to be highly idiosyncratic. However, as will be shown in this section, a closer investigation of the morphology of –tos forms in connection to their syntax and semantics reveals that this simple picture needs to be revised. It turns out that the architecture of –tos verbal adjectives is considerably more complex than described by Anagnostopoulou (2003) and A&A (2008), for two main reasons: First, it is actually not easy to decide on the basis of morphology whether –tos verbal adjectives involve inner or outer cycle attachment: sometimes –tos attaches directly to the root and sometimes outside a verbalizer, with absolutely no difference in the interpretation and syntax of the two cases. Importantly, –tos verbal adjectives uniformly lack event implications and the concomitant syntactic differences associated with them, regardless of whether –tos attaches directly to the root or to the root+verbalizer complex. Second, -tos attachment directly to the root provides some evidence for Arad’s hypothesis based on Multiple Contextualized Meaning (MCM). If the meaning of the root is completely unspecified the presence of a verbalizer fixes it first, and then –tos attaches to the Root+verbalizer complex. But idiomaticity is a different issue, and the domain for noncompositional, unpredictable interpretation of verbal adjectives/ participles turns out to be bigger than the domain defined by the first categorizing or eventivizing head: idiomatic meanings may arise at any point in the extended vP domain, provided that the properties associated with an agent are absent. The discussion is organized as follows. In section 3.1, we summarize from the previous literature the main evidence in favor of postulating a more complex architecture for –menos participles than for –tos forms. In section 3.2, we concentrate on the properties of –tos verbal adjectives which lead to a revision of the Anagnostopoulou (2003)/ A&A (2008) picture in two respects: (a) There are classes of –tos verbal adjectives which express negation and possibility/ability (the latter implicating an agent). These involve attachment above vP/VoiceP, similarly to –menos participles. (b) A class of –tos verbal adjectives involves attachment below the little v head contributing eventiveness but not necessarily below verbalizers. It thus follows that morphological verbalizers cannot be equated with abstract eventivizing (little v) heads. In section 3.3, we address the generalizations governing (i) the distribution of –menos vs. –tos in participles/ verbal adjectives and (ii) the presence vs. absence of verbalizers in Greek verbal adjectives. We argue that the morphological piece – menos is always associated with the Perfect of Result (Kratzer 1994, 2001), i.e. it is present with participles expressing that the subject is in the target or result state of a prior event. On the other hand, –tos is present in a heterogeneous set of cases all having in common that they uniformly lack event implications. We furthermore propose that verbalizers in Greek verbal adjectives are required on roots that do not fall under the basic ontological type “event”, following Harley’s (2005) root-typology. Having revised and refined the Anagnostopoulou (2003)/A&A (2008) picture of the –menos vs. –tos distinction, we finally proceed to the question of idiomaticity. In section 4, we test (1)/(8) by comparing the interpretations of the several types of –tos verbal adjectives to those of -menos participles and of the corresponding verbs. We conclude that agentivity and not eventiveness is the key property blocking idiomatic readings from participles, in accordance with Marantz (1996, 1997) and contra Marantz (2001, 2007). 3.1. The simple A 2003/ A& A 2008 picture: -menos is an outer- and –tos an inner-affix Next to adjectives, Greek has two adjectival constructions: the participle in –menos and what traditional grammars call the “verbal adjective” in –tos: 5 (9) “opened”/ “open” anig-men-os anix-t-os open-men-masc.sg.nom open-t-masc.sg.nom They have a similar function to adjectives, i.e. they appear in attributive and predicative positions:4 (10) a. b. (11) a. b. to anih-t-o parathiro the-neut.sg.nom open-t-neut.sg.nom window ‘the open window’ to anig-men-o parathiro the-neut.sg.nom open-men-neut.sg.nom window ‘the opened window’ to parathiro ine anih-t-o the window is open-t-neut.sg.nom ‘the window is open’ to parathiro ine anig-men-o the window is open-men-neut.sg.nom ‘the window is opened’ Participles and verbal adjectives show a number of semantic and syntactic differences discussed in Markantonatou et al. (1996), Georgala (2001), Kordoni (2002), Anagnostopoulou (2003), A&A (2008), among others. The most fundamental one is that –menos participles denote a state resulting from a prior event, while –tos verbal adjectives lack event implications. They denote what has been called “a characteristic state” by Markantonatou et al. (1996). Consider the examples in (12): (12) a. b. I patates ine tiganis-men-es The potatoes are fry-men-fem.pl.nom ‘The potatoes are fried’ I patates ine tigani-t-es The potatoes are fry-t-fem.pl.nom ‘The potatoes are fried’ (12a) conveys the meaning that the potatoes are fried as a result of a frying event: they have been fried e.g. a minute ago and are now ready to be eaten. On the other hand, (12b) simply expresses the fact that the potatoes are cooked in a particular way (“characteristic state” interpretation): they are fried (rather than e.g. cooked). A context bringing out this difference between the two adjectival forms is (13), based on Embick (2004: 357). As pointed out by Embick, the complement of verbs of creation cannot be a state resulting from a prior event because this would be a contradiction. And as can be seen in (13), –tos forms expressing characteristic states are licit in such a context, while –menos participles are not, due to their eventive subcomponent: (13) a. b. I porta chtistike The door-Nom built-NAct,3sg ‘The door was built open/*opened’ Magirepsa to kotopoulo Cooked-I the chicken anix-t-i/ *anig-men-i open/ opened vras-t-o/ *vras-men-o boiled/ boiled 4 Passives are verbal in Greek and therefore there is never an ambiguity between verbal and adjectival passives in Greek, unlike English. 6 ‘I cooked the chicken boiled’ c. Eftiaksa tis patates Made-I the potatoes ‘I made the potatoes fried’ tigani-t-es/ *tiganis-men-es fried/fried Crucially, the difference between the two forms with respect to event implications is associated with a number of syntactic differences. –menos participles can be modified by manner adverbs (14a) and can license by-phrases and instrument PPs (15a), while –tos verbal adjectives cannot (14b, 15b): (14) a. b. (15) a. b. Afto to vivlio ine kala gra-men-o This the book is well written ‘This book is well-written’ *Afto to kimeno ine kala grap-t-o This the text is well written O tixos ine xtis-men-os me mistri/ apo ton ergati The wall is built with trowel/ by the worker ‘The wall is built with a trowel/ by the worker’ *O tixos ine xtis-t-os me mistri/ apo ton ergati The wall is built with trowel/ by the worker Anagnostopoulou (2003), following Kratzer (2001), furthermore points out that -menos participles can denote target and resultant states (Parsons 1990: 234-235). The former describe states that are in principle reversible; the latter introduce states that hold forever after the event that brings them about. Target state participles in (16) are compatible with the adverbial akoma 'still', while resultant state participles in (17) are incompatible with it: (16) (17) Ta The *To The pedhia children theorima theorem ine are ine is akoma still akoma still krimena hidden apodedigmeno proven Target and resultant state –menos participles are not only semantically but also syntactically distinct. Target state –menos participles cannot license agent and instrument PPs and agentive adverbials. As shown by (18), by-phrases and instrument phrases are incompatible with akoma ‘still’: (18) a. b. Ta lastixa ine (*akoma) fuskomena The tires are (still) inflated ‘The tires are still inflated by Mary’ Ta lastixa ine (*akoma) fuskomena The tires are (still) inflated ‘The tires are still inflated with the pump’ apo by tin the Maria Mary me with tin the tromba pump Moreover, note that there are two types of manner adverbials, i.e. (a) manner adverbs that are result-oriented in that they modify the visible result of an event such as ‘sloppily’, ‘well’ and (b) manner adverbs that modify the initiator of the action such as ‘carefully’, ‘deliberately’ 7 (agent-oriented). As shown below, agent-oriented modifiers are incompatible with akoma (19), while adverbs denoting the visible result (result-oriented) are compatible with it (20): (19) (20) To thisavrofilakio itan (*akoma) prosektika anigmeno The safe was (still) cautiously opened ‘The safe was still cautiously opened’ Ta malia mu ine (akoma) atsala xtenismena The hair my is still sloppily combed ‘My hair is still sloppily combed’ On the basis of these considerations, A&A (2008) proposed that Greek has three types of participles with three different structures, depending on the height of attachment of the participle morpheme. According to A&A (2008), a layer Asp (=stativizer) attaches to the root in –tos participles, to vP in –menos target state participles and to VoiceP in –menos resultant state participles: (21) [AspP Asp X] (where X= Root, vP or VP) -tos verbal adjectives lack event implications (they are licensed after verbs of creation in (13), they do not permit result-oriented modification) and agentivity (no agent-oriented modification, no by-phrases and instruments). A&A (2008) take this to mean that they involve root-attachment: (22) ASP 3 ANIG ASP root attachment of Asp OPEN -t-menos target state participles which include the implication of an event (they are not licensed after verbs of creation in (13), they license result oriented modifiers) but lack agentivity (no agent-oriented modification, no by-phrases and instruments) involve v attachment (v is taken by A&A 2008 to be the eventivizing head): (23) Asp 3 v men 3 ANIG open v attachment of Asp Finally, -menos resultant state participles which include both implication of an event and agentivity (agent-oriented modification, licensing of by-phrases and instruments) involve Voice attachment (Voice is taken to introduce the external argument): 8 (24) Asp 3 Voice men 3 v 3 ANIG v open Voice attachment of Asp Important for present purposes is the proposal that –tos verbal adjectives instantiate ‘innercycle’ attachment while –menos participles ‘outer-cycle’ attachment: (25) root-cycle outer-cycle attachment -menos -tos functional head root … root… The distinction in (25) leads us to expect that –tos forms will show properties of inner affixation and –menos forms of outer affixation from the perspective of hypotheses (1)/(8). Prima facie evidence in favor of the “inner” vs. “outer” division in (25) comes from the observation that there is a striking difference in the productivity of –menos as opposed to –tos participles. While all verbs of the appropriate semantic type, i.e. all telic, many atelic and even some (coerced?) statives, can form –menos participles, there are many gaps in the formation of –tos participles. Some examples illustrating this are listed in (26):5 (26) a. b. c. d. e. vizag-menos rimag-menos doule-menos louz-menos pirag-menos *vizax-tos *rimax-tos *doulef-tos *lous-tos *pirax-tos ‘nursed’ ‘ruined’ ‘worked out’ ‘shampoo bathed’ ‘hurt, tampered 3.2. A more complex picture: different types of –tos participles A closer look into the properties of –tos verbal adjectives reveals that the Anagnostopoulou (2003)/ A&A (2008) classification of participles in (25) needs to be refined. As it turns out, there are some clear cases of –tos involving outer cycle attachment and some more controversial ones: (I) A clear case of outer cycle attachment is discussed in Samioti (2008, in progress). As pointed out by Markantonatou et al (1996), there is also a class of –tos participles denoting ability/ possibility rather than characteristic state: (27) a. Afti i dikaiologia ine pistef-t-i This the excuse is believe-t-fem.sg.nom ‘This excuse can be believed/ is believable’ 5 Note that out of 2722 verbs listed in the online Lexicon of Anastasiadi-Simeonidi (http://www.komvos.edu.gr/dictionaries/dictOnLine/DictOnLineRev.htm) that have been checked so far, 688 verbs form both –menos and tos participles, 1866 form only –menos participles and 168 verbs only –tos participles. These numbers need to be checked more carefully. 9 b. Afto to asteri ine ora-t-o This the star is see-t-neut.sg.nom ‘This star can be seen/ is visible’ Other participles of this type are katortho-t-os ‘achievable’, bore-t-os ‘doable’, epitefk-t-os ‘doable’, antilip-t-os ‘perceivable’, aisthi-t-os ‘perceivable’, ap-t-os ‘touchable’, thea-t-os ‘visible’, ia-t-os ‘curable’, fori-t-os ‘transportable’, noi-t-os ‘conceivale, thinkable’, katanoi-tos ‘understandable’, anek-t-os ‘tolerable’, ipofer-t-os ‘tolerable’ etc. Samioti (2008, in progress) argues that –tos in ability participles attaches above v. Evidence for this is drawn from the fact that they license agent (28a) and instrument PPs (28b) and agent-oriented adverbs of the type found in English middles (29): (28) (29) a. I istoria tou ine pistef-t-i apo olous. The story his is believable by everyone ‘His story can be believed by everyone’ b. To vouno ine ora-t-o me kialia. The mountain is visible with binoculars ‘The mountain is visible with binoculars’ To mathima ine efkola katanoi-t-o. the lesson is easily understandable ‘The lesson can be easily understood’ Samioti argues that ability –tos participles pattern syntactically with Greek middles as these have been described by Lekakou (2005). According to Lekakou, the middle Voice in Greek is a variant of the passive Voice, unlike English and other languages. An implicit external argument is present and, therefore, by-phrases and instruments are licit (see Lekakou 2005 for detailed argumentation). Adopting this analysis for ability/possibility participles, Samioti proposes that –tos attaches to the (middle) VoiceP (see Samioti 2008, in progress, for details). (II) A related, though less straightforward, case of high attachment is illustrated in (30). Greek has a productive process yielding ability/possibility –tos participles which consist of the verbal root and the adjectival prefix aksio- 'worth-': (30) a. b. c. d. aksi-agapi-tos : aksi-o-thavmas-tos: aksi-o-meleti-tos aksi-o-katafroni-tos worth loving worth admiring worth studying worth despising Semantically, such formations clearly implicate an agent (a generic/ impersonal agent corresponding to English “one”), pointing to the presence of Voice. Syntactically, they differ from the participles in (27)-(29) in that they do not license adverbs and instruments, and agentive PPs are marginally tolerated when they express universal quantification: (31) a. To arthro ine aksiomeletito (*prosektika) The article is worth-studying carefully 'The article is worth studying carefully' b. O planitis ine aksiomeletitos (*me to tileskopio) The planet is worth-studying with the telescope 'The planet is worth studying with the telescope' 10 c. To arthro ine aksiomeletito (?apo olus/ ?apo ton kathena The article is worth-studying by all/ by the everyone/ ?apo ton opjondipote) by the anyone 'The article is worth being studied by all/ everyone/ by anyone' Morphologically, these participles involve compounding, as evidenced by the fact that they systematically employ the compound marker –o- indicated in (30) (see Ralli 2001, 2006 for discussion of –o- in Greek).6 We tentatively suggest that they indeed contain Voice (perhaps the type of “middle” Voice also contained in ability/possibility participles), while the restrictions in (31) reduce to restrictions on compounding.7 (III) Negated participles instantiate a third case where, arguably and more controversially, –tos participles present an instance of outer cycle attachment. Negated participles obligatorily surface with –tos in Greek, as shown by the fact that the negated – menos forms in (35) and ungrammatical. Note that, even in cases when there is no corresponding non-negated –tos form available, such as (33) and (34), the presence of -tos instead of –menos is triggered by negation: (32) a. gra-men-os b. written a-graf-t-os un-written (33) a. pli-men-os washed b. a-pli-t-os un-washed (34) a. diavas-menos b. read (grap-t-os) (*pli-tos) a-diavas-t-os (*diavas-tos) un-read 6 Some examples of compounds displaying this marker are the following: (i) a. xart-o-peksia ‘card playing’ b. trapez-o-ipallilos ‘bank employee’ c. maxer-o-piruno ‘knife & fork’ d. Afstr-o-Ungaria ‘Austria-Hungary’ 7 The issue of compounding deserves further investigation. Samioti (in progress) compares the properties of aksio-compounds to-tos participles involving compounding with the manner adverbs efkola- ‘easily’ and dhiskola ‘with difficulty’. These are formations like efkol-o-diavas-tos lit. easy-read-tos “something that can be easily read” and diskol-o-diavas-tos lit. difficult-read-tos “something hard to read’. Samioti points out the following: (i) All three types of compounds disallow instrument PPs. (ii) In efkolo- and dhiskolo-compounds, the adverbs efkola- ‘easily’ and dhiskola ‘with difficulty’ are manner adverbs, a fact which can potentially explain why further manner adverbs cannot be licensed with them. Note, though, that this explanation does not immediately carry over to aksio-compounds, because aksio- ‘worth’ is not a manner but rather an evaluative adverb. (iii) Interestingly, aksio-compounds differ from efkolo- and dhiskolo- compounds w.r.t. the type of agentive PP they license. While aksio-compounds marginally license PPs introduced by the preposition apo ‘from’, which generally introduces agents in Greek (see e.g. Alexiadou & Anagnostopoulou 2004, Alexiadou, Anagnostopoulou & Schäfer 2006 for discussion and references), efkolo- and dhiskolo- compounds license ‘agentive’ PPs introduced by the preposition gia ‘for’, as in (i) (we would rather call these PPs ‘relevance’ PPs, as they express the person for which something is easy or difficult to do): (i) Afto to fagito ine efkol-o-magirefto gia oles tis nikokires This the food is easily-cook-to for all the housewives ‘This food is easy to cook for all housewives’ A similar fact has been noted for some (though not all) middles, namely the existence of well-formed examples like No Latin text translated easily for Bill (compare though to *These books don’t sell for the average shopkeeper); see among others Stroik (1992, 1995, 1999) and Ackema & Schoorlemmer (1995) for discussion. 11 (35) a. *a-diavas-menos un-read b. *a-pli-men-os un-washed At first sight, negated participles behave as if they involve attachment to the root. They do not imply a prior event, and this correlates with the lack of the key syntactic properties associated with a vP/VoiceP architecture (see Anagnostopoulou 2003 following Kratzer 1994, and A&A 2008 who adopt a root-attachment analysis based on the facts in (36)-(38)). More specifically, they resist manner modification, as illustrated in (36b), and they do not license by-phrases and instruments, as shown in (37b) and (38b), respectively. In all respects they differ from their non-negated –menos counterparts in (36a), (37a) and (38a): (36) a. b. (37) a. b. (38) a. b. I Maria ine prosektika The Maria is carefully 'Mary is carefully combed' *I Maria ine aprosekta The Maria is sloppily/not carefully '*Mary is sloppily uncombed' To vivlio ine gra-men-o apo The book is written by 'The book is written by Mary' *To vivlio ine a-graf-t-o apo The book is unwritten by '*The book is unwritten by Mary' To vivlio ine gra-men-o me The book is written with 'The book is written with a typewritter' *To vivlio ine a-graf-t-o me The book is unwritten with '*The book is unwritten with a typewritter' xtenis-men-i manner adverbs combed a-xtensi-t-i un-combed tin the Maria by-phrases Mary tin the Maria Mary grafomixani typewritter instruments grafomixani typewritter From the point of view of their productivity, morphology and interpretation, however, they behave as if they involve outer cycle attachment (cf. Embick 2004: 359, fn 6 for English negated un-participles). First, negated –tos participles are fully productive, similarly to – menos partciples and unlike –tos ones. Second, in cases of morphologically conditioned stem allomorphy, negated –tos participles do not show the same allomorphy as the corresponding non-negated –tos form: (39) a. a-graf-tos un-written b. grap-tos written c. *a-grap-tos un-written Third, they clearly form the negation of –menos participles, in cases where there is no corresponding –tos form (see (33) and (34) above). And fourth, when all three forms exist, negated participles negate –menos and not –tos participles. For example, a-graf-t-os in (32) above means ‘something that has not been yet written’ and not ‘something that is not in a written form’ (see Setatos 1984; Anastasiadi-Simeonidi 1994). But if negated participles involve the negation of the –menos forms, then this leads to the postulation of an “outercycle” architecture for them (contra Anagnostopoulou 2003 and A&A 2008). Under such an analysis, the reason why -tos and not -menos surfaces on negated participles might be a 12 morpho-phonological one, related to stress: the suffix -ménos requires stress while the negation prefix a- triggers obligatory recession of stress, a conflict resolved by the insertion of -tos. (IV) The final case we would like to discuss is the most interesting one from the perspective of hypotheses (1)/(8) discussed in this paper. Note first that Greek productively employs verbalizing suffixes which have been analyzed as root verbalizers by Alexiadou (2001, 2009; see Giannakidou & Merchant 1999; Ralli 2001 for discussion of these elements): (40) Root- verbalizing elements Greek: -iz, - on-, -en/an, -ev,- -az, -a Alexiadou (2001, 2009): (41) a. c. e. aspr-iz-o, whiten diaplat-en-o, widen, diav-az-o, read kathar-iz-o cleaned arost-en-o become sick mir-az-o split, share b. d. f. pag-on-o freeze sten-ev-o, tighten , pul-a-o sell ler-on-o dirty berd-ev-o confuse xal-a-o destroy As expected by the “outer-analysis” of –menos participles in (25), verbalizers (or their allomorphs as in the (c), (f) examples) are systematically present in –menos participles, providing morphological evidence for outer cycle attachment: (42) a. b. c. d. e. f. aspr-iz-menos, whitened, pag-o-menos, frozen, diaplat-i-menos, widened, sten-e-menos, tightened, diav-az-menos, read pul-i-menos sold kathar-iz-menos cleaned ler-o-menos dirtied arost-i-menos sickened berd-e-menos confused mir-az-menos split, shared xal-az-menos destroyed Root verbalizers are often disallowed in –tos participles, a fact which was taken by A&A (2008) as evidence for root attachment on –tos in (25):8 (43) a. b. c. d. *aspr-is-tos, whitened, *pag-o-tos, frozen, *diaplat-i-tos, widened, *sten-ef-tos, tightened, *kathar-is-tos cleaned *ler-o-tos dirtied *arost-i-tos sickened *berd-ef-tos confused 8 For some of these examples (the ones based on adjectival roots) there is an alternative well-formed formation based on the root + the adjectival ending: *kathar-is-tos (cleaned) vs. kathar-os (clean), *aspr-is-tos (whitened) vs. aspr-os (white), *sten-ef-tos (tightened) vs. sten-os (tight). A&A 2008 analyse this as an instance of blocking. See below for discussion. 13 e. *diav-as-tos, read *mir-as-tos split, shared But, quite unexpectedly, many Greek characteristic state –tos participles that do include such verbalizing elements: (44) a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. axn-is-tos ‘steaming hot’ koudoun-is-tos ‘ringing’ vathoul-o-tos ‘hollow’ vid-o-tos ‘screwed’ if-an-tos ‘woven’ magir-ef-tos ‘cooked’ fit-ef-tos ‘planted’ angali-as-tos ‘embraced’ evodi-as-tos ‘fragrant’ axn-iz-o koudoun-iz-o vathoul-on-o vid-on-o if-en-o magir-ev-o fit-ev-o angali-az-o evodi-az-o ‘steam’ ‘ring (a bell)’ ‘hollow out’ ‘screw’ ‘weave’ ‘cook’ ‘plant’ ‘embrase’ ‘be fragrant’ Despite the presence of verbalizers, the –tos participles in (44) do not have event implications (they denote characteristic states), and they do not license manner modification, agent PPs or instruments: (45) a. b. c. *To fagito The food *To fagito The food *Ta fita The plants ine kala/ prosektika is well/ carefully ine magir-ef-t-o is cooked ine fit-ef-t-a are planted magir-ef-t-o cooked apo tin Maria by the Mary me diaforetika ergalia with different instruments The characteristic state participles of the type illustrated in (44) are important to our discussion, as they show that the abstract little v heads described in the decomposition literature, i.e. the semi-functional heads introducing eventive interpretations (and licensing result-oriented manner modification) must be dissociated from morphological verbalizers. This poses an immediate problem concerning the proper understanding of (1) and (8): the question is raised what counts as a phase head in –menos and –tos participles. The verbalizers in (40) which are also present in –tos verbal adjectives like (44) or the abstract eventive little v heads licensing modifiers and PPs, which are consistently absent from characteristic state – tos verbal adjectives, even when they include a morphological verbalizer? In the next sections, we will argue that morphological verbalizers indeed serve as contexts for meaning assignment to unspecified roots, in accordance with (1)/(8), as these generalizations have been interpreted by Arad (2003, 2005) in her work on Hebrew. But this is a separate issue from the question of idiomatic interpretations, where the domain for unpredictable meaning of participles is considerably larger, and neither verbalizers nor eventivizers have a special status, but rather Voice. 3.3. Revisions and Generalizations The discussion in the previous sections has led us to revise the typology of Greek verbal adjectives in two respects: a) First, –tos does not always attach below little v. There is one clear case where -tos attaches above little v (ability –tos, Samioti 2008; in progress) and two more cases where -tos possibly 14 attaches above little v (aksio-compounding, negated –tos participles). It is an open question at this point whether the different types of –tos verbal adjectives involve a single morphological piece -tos inserted in stative environments lacking event implications, with the three different interpretations resulting from the specific environments of insertion (a case of polysemy) or whether Greek has three different -tos, i.e. ability -tos, negation -tos, characteristic state –tos (a case of homophony). It is interesting though that Greek is not unique in showing the same morphology for stativized expressions and for expressions denoting ability/possibility, i.e. the counterparts of –able adjectives in English. Chichewa (Dubinsky & Simango 1996: 759, ex. (17)) and Malagasy (Travis 2005) are similar in this respect. b) Second, the morphological decomposition of –tos characteristic state verbal adjectives leads to the identification of verbalizing heads in a number of cases, as was shown by the examples (44). Crucially, as shown by (45), these morphological verbalizers do not have the syntactico-semantic properties of the abstract little v head identified and discussed in the decomposition literature (Embick 2004; Alexiadou, Anagnostopoulou & Schäfer 2006; Marantz 2001, 2007; Harley 2012 and related literature), i.e. they do not contribute eventiveness nor do they license modifiers and argumental PPs. Alexiadou (2009) reaches exactly the same conclusion for result nominals in Greek, which may contain a verbalizer which however does not contribute eventiveness and does not license arguments. In view of these revisions, what are then the generalizations governing (i) the distribution of –menos vs. –tos in participles/ verbal adjectives and (ii) the presence vs. absence of verbalizers in Greek verbal adjectives? Starting from the first issue, the affix –menos signifies the Perfect of Result, i.e. it is present whenever the participle denotes a target or resultant state resulting from a prior event (Kratzer 1994; 2001). For –tos it is unclear whether it presents a case of polysemy or homophony. Under the first option, there is a single morphological piece –tos inserted whenever there is no prior event implied, maybe as an elsewhere form in the absence of a Perfect of Result operator. Alternatively, there are three different –tos morphemes, namely ability -tos, characteristic state –tos, and the negated Perfect of Result -tos inserted for morphophonological reasons. We conclude that verbal adjectives with –tos involve either inner- or outer-cycle attachment, contra A&& (2008), namely: (i) Ability/ possibility –tos forms clearly show outer-cycle attachment, and they contain a (middle) VoiceP. (ii) –tos forms involving ‘aksi-o-’ compounding (e.g. aksi-o-meletitos ‘worth-studying’) possibly also contain a VoiceP and hence are formed by outer-cycle attachment. (iii) When a target/ resultant state participle is negated there are semantic and morphological reasons for positing –tos attachment above vP or VoiceP, though the syntactic evidence is less clear. (iv) Characteristic state verbal adjectives do not have event implications and lack all syntactic properties associated with a little v head providing evidence for inner-cycle attachment. They pose, however, a puzzle. While –tos attaches directly to the root in a number of cases, it attaches to the Root+verbalizer in another set of cases. This leads to the second question that needs to be addressed, namely what is the explanation for the presence vs. absence of morphological verbalizers in –tos characteristic state participles. In answering this question, we would like to pursue hypothesis (46): (46) Selection hypothesis: -tos selects expressions naming events 15 With Harley (2005) we assume that roots fall into basic ontological types naming events, things and states. We can then formulate the following generalizations concerning the absence or presence of verbalizers inside –tos: Generalization I: -tos directly attaches to roots which can be characterized as Rootevent in terms of Harley’s ontology, as shown in (47). These forms involve roots with a specified meaning (they express particular types of events) yielding verbs (as in the first column of 47) by combining with the verbal inflectional ending either directly (as in 47b,d,e,f,g) or via the formative –n- (in 47a,c).9 (47) a. b. c. d. e. f. g. ftiax-n-o lin-o per-n-o klev-o din-o plek-o klin-o ‘make’ ‘loosen’ ‘take’ ‘steal’ ‘give’ ‘knit’ ‘close’ ftiax-tos li-tos par-tos klef-tos do-tos plek-tos klis-tos ‘made’ ‘loose’ ‘taken’ ‘stolen’ ‘given’ ‘knitten’ ‘closed’ In these cases, the selection requirement of –tos stated in (46) is satisfied because –tos directly combines with roots naming events (and see fn. 6 on the question of whether root or stem is the appropriate notion). Generalization II: -tos does not combine with Rootthing. It combines with Rootthing + verbalizer10. In a number of cases illustrated in (48) roots have a specified meaning naming a thing and can be combined directly with nominal inflection forming a noun (first column in 48). –tos cannot directly combine with such roots. As shown by the third column in (48), they first become verbal by combining with a verbalizer (cf. the second column in (48) where such roots are turned into verbs by a verbalizer plus the verbal inflection), and then –tos attaches to the root + verbalizer complex: (48) a. b. c. d. e. f. afr-os ‘foamN’ axn-os ‘steamN’ vid-a ‘screwN’ koudoun-i ‘ringN’ koumb-i ‘buttonN’ skep-i ‘roof’ afr-iz-o ‘foamV’ axn-iz-o ‘steamV’ vid-on-o ‘screwV’ koudoun-iz-o ‘ringV’ koumb-on-o ‘buttonV’ skep-az-o ‘cover’ afr-is-tos ‘foaming’ axn-is-tos ‘steaming hot’ vid-o-tos ‘screwed’ koudoun-is-tos ‘ringing’ koumb-o-tos ‘buttoned’ skep-as-tos ‘covered’ Note that in some cases, such as (49), the denominal verb formed by the Rootthing + verbalizer is deviant (second column in 49, i.e. such expressions cannot name events and therefore they cannot be verbs), while the corresponding –tos participle is perfect: (49) kamban-a ‘bellN’ ??kamban-iz-o ‘bellV’ kamban-is-tos ‘sounding like a bell’ We propose that the presence of a verbalizer in formations of this kind is necessary to satisfy the selection requirements of –tos in (46). 9 There are a number of further observations one can make here. First, the absence of –n- in the verbal adjectives as in (47a) could be viewed as evidence that –tos directly attaches to the root and not to the verb, if it can be ensured that the reason for the absence of –n- is not morpho-phonological. Second, in (47c, e, g) –tos attaches to the perfective stem (marked by stem allomorphy in 47c, e and by the presence of –s- in 47g), a fact that could, in principle, receive either a semantic or a phonological explanation. The question raised by such examples is to what extent it is legitimate to talk in these cases about –tos attachment to roots rather than stems. We have to leave these questions open for now. 10 See Alexiadou, 2009, for discussion of such formations. 16 An issue that needs to be discussed at this point concerns the criteria by which the verbal and adjectival forms in the second and third columns of (48), (49) above are indeed root derived (based on Rootthing), as opposed to being derived from zero related nouns (e.g. based on Root plus a little n with a zero exponent). A way to decide this is to apply Kiparsky's (1982) criteria. Kiparsky argues that root-based formations do not entail the existence of the corresponding nouns while noun-derived ones do entail the existence of the corresponding nouns (see Arad 2003, 2005 for extensive discussion of Hebrew based on Kiparsky). For many of the forms in (48), (49) it can indeed be demonstrated that they are root derived. For example, vidono and vidotos in (48c) do not entail the existence of a screw but rather they refer to the type of movement required for putting two pieces together. In a similar manner, koumbono and koumbotos in (48e) do not entail the existence of a button (they refer to closing something by making use of a particular device), koudounizo and koudounistos (48d) /kambanistos (49) do not entail the existence of a ring/bell (they mean sounding like a ring/bell), skepazo and skepastos (48f) do not entail a roof (they mean cover and being covered) and axnizo and axnistos (48b) do not entail steam (they mean hot and cosy like anything that is steaming hot).11 Generalization III: As shown in (50), -tos does not combine with Rootstate + verbalizer because there is an adjective blocking the –tos form (as pointed out by A&A 2008). (50) aspr-iz-o 'whiten' mavr-iz-o 'blacken' kitrin-iz-o 'yellow' prasin-iz-o 'green' kathar-iz-o 'clean' megal-on-o 'grow' aspr-iz-men-os mavr-iz-men-os kitrin-iz-men-os prasin-iz-men-os kathar-iz-men-os megal-o-men-os aspr-os/i/o mavr-os/i/o kitrin-os/i/o prasin-os/i/o kathar-os/i/o megalos 'white' 'black' 'yellow' 'green' 'clean' 'big' *is-tos *is-tos *is-tos *is-tos *is-tos *o-tos In principle, however, the formation Rootstate + verbalizer + tos is possible. And indeed, such forms do exist, but they have specialized uses. For example, the –tos form in (51) is used only for food: (51) kokin-iz-o 'redden' kokin-os/i/o 'red' kokin-is-tos ‘with a red sauce’ Overall, we have checked many –tos participles containing the verbalizers –iz-, -az-, -ar-, on-, -ev-, and it turns out that the majority of them are as in (48)/(49), i.e. they are based on Rootthing+ verbalizer. These have corresponding nouns of the form Rootthing+ nominal inflection. A few –tos participles with a verbalizer are based on Rootstate (adjective or adverb/ preposition), as in (51) and (52) below: (52) a. b. c. d. stogil-ev-tos thab-o-tos xor-is-tos antam-o-tos round-ef-tos misty-o-tos without-is-tos together-o-tos ‘round/ rounded’ ‘misty/ blurred’ ‘separate’ ‘together’ There is a final set of cases, to be discussed immediately, which leads to a particular interpretation of the hypothesis (1)/(8). 11 Of course, one would have to check all such formations available in the Greek lexicon in order to draw firm conclusions concerning this issue. For example, by Kiparsky’s criteria the verbal and adjectival forms in (48a) seem to qualify as being based on a zero-derived noun. 17 Generalization IV: verbalizers turn undefined roots into Constructevent and then –tos attaches to the Rootundefined + verbalizer. A group of –tos participles is based on a Root with no clear meaning (call it Rootundefined ) which combines with a verbalizer. This type of root has unspecified meaning in the sense that (a) one couldn’t assign an exact meaning to it and (b) there is no corresponding noun or adjective or verb of the form Rootundefined + Inflection. Two different subcases fall under this category. (i) A number of undefined roots represent sounds or movements or shapes (they are often formed by reduplication). A verbalizer must necessarily attach to them before they become verbs (surfacing with verbal inflectional endings), and then they enter further derivation (becoming adjectives, as in (53), or nouns): (53) a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. kakar-is-tos tsitsir-is-tos trekl-is-tos tourtour-is-tos gourl-o-tos koxl-as-tos xarxal-ef-tos paspat-ef-tos ‘cackling’ ‘sizzling / frizzling’ ‘staggering’ ‘shivering / shuddering’ ‘goggling’ ‘bubbling’ ‘rummaging’ ‘fiddling’ (ii) There is a residue of roots which seem completely and totally undefined before a verbalizer attaches to them, making them of type “event”. –tos suffixation follows: (54) a. b. c. d. e. kt-is-tos sk-is-tos str-o-tos lig-is-tos sik-o-tos ‘built’ ‘slit’ ‘smooth, regular’ ‘bent’ ‘raised’ The two types of roots described above, especially the ones in (54), seem to us to be very close to what Arad (2003, 2005) describes for Hebrew. One couldn’t exactly tell what they mean. According to Arad (2003, 2005), there are two types of languages: In Hebrew-type languages (also Georgian, Russian) roots may be assigned numerous interpretations in different morphophonological environments (MCM). This correlates with the fact that (i) roots are semantically underspecified and (ii) the inventory of roots in the languages in question is small. On the other hand, in English-type languages most roots are assigned meaning in one environment only (exception to this are Latinate bound roots like √fer, √cieve etc.; see fn 12 below). This correlates with the fact that (i) they are semantically specified and (ii) the inventory of roots is large. Greek seems to be an English-type language. A large number of Greek roots are semantically specified.12 However, there are exceptions to this in both English (the latinate roots mentioned above; see also fn. 12) and Greek (see Alexiadou & Anagnostopoulou 2011, to appear for discussion of the Greek counterparts of words based on proto-indoeuropean roots, where prefixes drawn from the Ancient Greek prepositional inventory fix the meaning of unspecified roots). The examples in (53), (54) constitute a further class of exceptions. In the cases listed in (53) and (54) lack of clear/ stable meaning correlates with the inability to classify the roots according to Harley's ontology. Adding a verbalizer to these roots on the one hand makes them classifiable in terms of Harley’s basic 12 As in English, exception to this are roots with a proto-Indo-European origin like √fer. These form multiple verbs with very different interpretations depending on the prefix they combine with: dia-fer-o: differ, pro-fer-o: pronounce, ana-fer-o: report, pros-fer-o: offer, ek-fer-o: formulate. 18 ontology and at the same time it fixes their meaning, which is then retained throughout the derivation. We believe that this double function of verbalizers in the case at hand provides a key towards understanding why categorizers serve as contexts for meaning assignment to unspecified roots. Roots must be classifiable in terms of a basic ontology naming events, things and states. If they are not, as in (53), (54) or in the cases of the Hebrew type MCM Arad discusses, a categorizing head serves to classify them. The classification itself makes them acquire what is sensed as fixed “meaning”, which is then retained throughout the derivation. We conclude that the Greek facts in (53) and (54) support an interpretation of (1)/(8) along the lines of Arad (2003, 2005), where the crucial head is the categorizing head (in the cases we discuss vC) which makes roots classifiable in terms of Harley’s (2005) basic ontology. 3.4. Summary: How many participles? We have arrived at the following picture of Greek adjectival participles and verbal adjectives w.r.t. the question of outer vs. inner cycle architecture: (55) Greek Participles and Verbal Adjectives 1) Two types of -menos participles: a) target state -menos participles b) resultant state -menos participles outer attachment outer attachment 2) Four types of -tos participles: a) ability -tos participles, b) aksio- compounding -tos participles c) negation -tos participles d) characteristic state -tos participles : (56) root-cycle = tos + Rootevent outer attachment outer attachment (possibly) outer attachment (possibly) direct attachment to Rootevent attachment to Rootthing+ verbalizer attachment to Rootstate+ verbalizer attachment to Rootundefined+ verbalizer outer-cycle attachment= ability-tos -tos -tos VoiceP root Voice … root… Does not count as outer-cycle = tos + [Rootthing/state/undefined + verbalizer] 3 -tos 3 v root There is one question raised by these participles which will only be mentioned briefly and will not be answered here concerning the polysemy vs. homophony issue mentioned earlier in 19 the paper. In principle, this question can be asked for both –menos participles and –tos participles. For –menos participles the question is the following. Are there two different – menos suffixes one yielding target states and one yielding resultant states which have different selection requirements and different syntax (target state –menos necessarily attaching below Voice) or is there one –menos yielding resultant states or target states depending on the context of insertion? In view of the close similarity in meaning between resultant and target state participles, we are inclined to think that the second option is more plausible: there is only one –menos suffix yielding states resulting from events; the resultant vs. target state difference must derive from the context, e.g. the idiosyncratic properties of the root, the size of the complement (if the complement is VoiceP then the state is necessarily a resultant state), plus some further properties of the structure. For example, the presence of adverbs has been noted by Kratzer to provide the component necessary for a target state to verbal roots otherwise yielding resultant states ((57) is Kratzer’s example (21)): (57) a. b. * Meine Haare waren immer noch My hairs were still ‘My hair was still cut’ Meine Haare waren immer noch My hairs were still ‘My hair was still cut sloppily’ geschnitten. cut schlampig sloppily geschnitten cut For –tos the issue is more involved since it is not clear that –tos has a uniform semantics in characteristic state participles, negated participles and ability/possibility participles. Moreover, the cross-linguistic evidence we reviewed does not provide straightforward support in favor of the one over the other alternative hypothesis. On the one hand, English distinguishes –ed (in negated and simple state adjectival participles) from –able (for ability/possibility adjectives) supporting the homophony hypothesis. On the other hand, Chichewa and Malagasy use the same element for both types of adjectives, like Greek, providing crosslinguistic support in favor of the polysemy alternative (the unifying property of all three kinds being the absence of a prior event). Turning to the issue of non-compositionality discussed in this paper, characteristic state – tos verbal adjectives are particularly relevant to the hypothesis (1)/(8) for two reasons: a) First, they present evidence that the presence of a verbalizer does not, in itself, contribute eventiveness and the syntactic properties associated with it. b) Second, they present evidence that the presence of a verbalizer fixes the meaning of unspecified roots which cannot be classified according to Harley's typology. 13 We are now in a position to turn to the question of idiomaticity. We do so in the next section, and we refer the reader to Anagnostopoulou & Samioti (in progress) for a more complete discussion. 4. A bigger domain for Idioms 4.1. Neither vC nor vE are not boundaries for idioms We assume a working definition of idioms along the lines of Svenonius (2005: 1): “....listed syntactic structures which […] have unpredictable meanings in the way words do, but consist of more than one “piece”. In multi-word idioms, “piece” is the phonological word. In single13 The cases where aspectual prefixes determine the meaning of verbal (i.e. event denoting) roots, as in English with words based on Latinate roots, in Russian (Arad 2003: 775, 2005) and in Greek (mentioned in footnote 12) should also be taken into account and might lead to a partial modification of this statement. 20 word idioms “piece” is the head (Roots, affixes). Here we are looking at single word idioms. In view of the dissociation between verbalizing heads (categorizing heads, vC) and little v (the head contributing eventiveness, licensing arguments etc., vE) introduced in the previous discussion, the Marantz/ Arad hypothesis as a hypothesis about idioms can, in principle, be tested in two ways: a) Taking literally the proposal that once a root is categorized it is assigned a range of meanings fixed for the rest of the derivation, what should be tested is whether the presence of a verbalizer in –tos participles yields such an effect. In other words, are there significant differences between –tos verbal adjectives with a verbalizer and –tos adjectives without a verbalizer w.r.t. idiomaticity, in comparison to the corresponding verbs? b) Assuming, alternatively, that it is the presence of eventive v which defines a cyclic domain for interpretation (phase), it should be tested whether the presence of an eventive little v fixes meaning in a way that affixes attached above it always lead to predictable interpretations (outer affixation). In other words, are there significant differences between – tos and –menos forms and the corresponding verbs w.r.t. idiomaticity? The answer to the first question is negative. The internal composition of –tos verbal adjectives denoting characteristic states does not correlate in any way with (non-)idiomaticity. Characteristic state verbal adjectives of both types (simplex without a verbalizer or complex with a verbalizer) can have idiomatic readings lacking from the corresponding verbs. This is illustrated in (58) and (59) below: Characteristic state -tos verbal adjectives showing direct attachment of –tos to Rootevent: Verb Participle Idiomatic interpretation of participle only (58) a. sfing-o sfix-tos tighten tight ‘careful with money’ b. ftin-o ftis-tos spit lit. spitted ‘spitting image’ c. klin-o klis-tos close lit. closed ‘introverted’ Characteristic state -tos verbal adjectives showing attachment of –tos to Root+ verbalizer: Verb (59) a. b. c. d. kol-a-o glue-1sg xtip-a-o bang, hit, whip xon-ev-o digest karf-on-o nail Participle Idiomatic interpretation of participle only ‘close friend’ kol-i-tos lit. glued xtip-i-tos lit. whipped xon-ef-tos no lit. meaning karf-o-tos no lit. meaning ‘striking’ ‘inside the wall’ ‘very fast/ direct’ The answer to the second question is again negative. -menos participles may have idiosyncratic meanings, just like the –tos verbal adjectives in (58) and (59): (60) striv-o twist stri-menos geros 'crotchety old man’ strif-to tsigaro lit. twisted (rolled) cigarette 21 Strikingly, the –menos participle in example (60) only has the idiomatic reading when modifying a [+human] noun, while the verb and the –tos participle can only have the literal meaning. But this is the reverse of what is expected if (1)/(8) are understood as applying to idioms and if the relevant phase head is taken to be vE (the abstract eventivizing head). What would be expected under such an interpretation of (1)/(8) is that the characteristic state –tos participle has the idiomatic reading and the –menos participle the compositional meaning. It is furthermore expected that the idiomatic reading of the –menos participle depends on the idiomatic interpretation of the corresponding verb, i.e. exactly the opposite of what we see in (60). As we discuss in detail in Anagnostopoulou & Samioti (in progress), there is extensive evidence that there is no necessary correlation between the meaning of verbs and the meaning of the corresponding –menos participles. We distinguish between the following three cases: i. Idiomatic verb kathar-iz-o lit. ‘clean’ idiom. ‘kill’ (61) a. b. ii. Non-idiomatic participle kathar-iz-menos only lit. ‘cleaned’ ton katharisan xtes to vrady him cleaned-3sg yesterday the evening ‘They killed him yesterday evening’ ?aftos o anthropos ine katharismenos this the man is cleaned ‘This man is cleaned’ Non-idiomatic verb trav-a-o only lit. ‘pull’14 Idiomatic participle trav-ig-menos lit. pulled idiom ‘far fetched’ Verb (62) a. b. Participle (63) a. O Janistravik-s-e tin porta The Janis pulled the door ‘Janis pulled the door’ *O Janis travik-s-e to epixirima The Janis pulled the argument ‘*Janis pulled the argument’ ?I porta The door ‘Janis is pulled’ ine trav-ig-meni is pulled lit interpretation 14 This verb can have an idiomatic reading as a phrasal idiom (i) either when it combines with the prefix para (meaning exaggeration) or when combined with clitic doubled object to skini ‘the rope’: (i) a. O Janis to paratravikse The Janis it para-pulled ‘John went too far’ b. O Janis to travikse to skini The Janis it pulled the rope ‘John went too far’ Crucially, for present purposes, one does not ‘pull the argument’ or ‘pull the story’; compare (62b) to (63b). 22 b. iii. (64) To epixirima ine trav-ig-meno The argument is pulled ‘The argument is far fetched’ Only idiom. interpretation Idiomatic verb: one meaning Idiomatic participle: another xon-ev-o lit. ‘digest’ idiom. ‘like’ xon-e-menos lit. ‘digested’ idiom. ‘understood’ Verb – Participle literal (65) a. O Janisxonep-s-e to fagito The Janis digested the food ‘Janis digested the food’ b. To fagito ine xone-meno The food is digested ‘The food is digested’ Verb idiomatic – Participle idiomatic (66) a. O Janisden xonevi ta mathimatika The Janis not digests the math ‘Janis dislikes mathematics’ b. Ta mathimatika den ine xone-mena The mathematics not are digested ‘Math is not understood In conclusion, neither vC nor vE constitute boundaries for idiosyncratic/ un-predictable/ noncompositional meanings of participles in Greek, contrary to what one might expect on the basis of (1)/(8). 4.2. Agentive Voice is a boundary for idioms While idiomatic interpretations are not blocked by vC or vE, agentive features systematically destroy non-compositional interpretations of –tos and –menos forms. Specifically: (a) –tos verbal adjectives denoting ability/ possibility which implicate an agent, never have idiomatic readings. All participles belonging to this class have exactly the same meanings as the corresponding verbs, and their interpretations are always predictable. Some of these forms are listed below: (67) katortho-t-os ‘achievable’, bore-t-os ‘able’ ‘doable’, epitefk-t-os ‘doable’, antilip-t-os ‘perceivable’, aisthi-t-os ‘perceivable’, ap-t-os ‘touchable’, thea-t-os ‘visible’, ia-t-os ‘curable’, fori-t-os ‘transportable’, noi-t-os ‘conceivale, thinkable’, katanoi-t-os ‘understandable’, anek-t-os ‘tolerable’, ipofer-t-os ‘tolerable’ etc. (b) Whenever the adjectival prefix aksio- (‘worth’) combines with a idiomatic participle yielding a modal ability/possibility interpretation which implicates an implicit agent, the non-compositional meaning is lost, as shown in (68): 23 (68) a. b. trav-ig-menos lit. pulled idiom ‘far fetched’ stri-menos lit. twisted idiom. ‘crotchety’ aksi-o-travix-tos only lit: worth pulling aksi-o-strif-tos only lit: worth twisting (c) Agentive adverbs like ‘deliberately’ and agent-oriented manner adverbs like ´carefully’ systematically block idiomatic interpretations (see Alexiadou, Anagnostopoulou & Schäfer among many others for discussion of these properties in connection to agentive Voice): (69) a. b. trav-ig-menos lit. pulled idiom ‘far fetched’ stri-menos lit. twisted idiom. ‘crotchety’ prosektika / skopima travigmenos only lit.: carefully/ deliberately pulled prosektika/ skopima strimenos only lit: carefully/ deliberately twisted (d) The same effect is trigerred by agentive and instrument PPs in (70): (70) stri-menos jeros BUT stri-menos apo kapion/ me kati idiom. ‘crotchety man’ only lit. ‘twisted by someone / with something’ The effects of agentivity illustrated above are consistent with Marantz’s (1996, 1997) generalization that the syntactic head that projects an agent defines a locality domain for special meanings: (71) 3 boundary for domain of special meaning agent 3 v head projecting agent (Marantz’s 1997 (6)) Predictions: (Marantz’s 1997 (7)): (72) a. b. c. No idioms with fixed agents (root in agent position, context for special meaning) No eventive-passive idioms, but possible non-eventive stative idioms) No idioms with causative morpheme and lower agentive verb, but possible idioms with causative and lower non-agentive verb) In Marantz’s (1997) system, the difference between verbal and adjectival participles w.r.t. idiomaticity, i.e. prediction (72b), is linked to agentivity; in Marantz (2001, 2007), on the other hand, it is linked to the verbal/eventive vs. adjectival/stative nature of English participles. While the two hypotheses are difficult to tell apart on the basis of English participles which collapse agentivity with eventiveness and verb-hood, and lack of agentivity 24 with stativity and adjective-hood, the Greek data discussed in this paper show that agentivity and not eventiveness or verb-hood is crucial. Throughout the paper and in this section, we have only looked at adjectival/ stative forms with or without verbalizers, event implications and agentivity. We saw that idiomatic meanings freely occur with –menos participles and -tos verbal adjectives as long as the relevant morphological constructs do not implicate an agent. But when agentivity features are present, compositional interpretations are enforced on both – tos and –menos forms preserving the literal meanings of the corresponding verbs. Assuming, furthermore, that agentivity is linked to the head Voice, this leads to the conclusion that Voice is a boundary for special meanings within the word. In an approach based on phasehood, this, in turn, entails that Voice and not v qualifies as a phase head (in line with Chomsky 2001; contra Marantz 2007). 5. Concluding remarks In this paper, we discussed the issue of (non-)compositionality of meaning on the basis of a case study, namely Greek –menos participles and –tos verbal adjectives denoting characteristic state, negation and ability/possibility. We investigated the Marantz/Arad hypothesis in (1) (1) The Marantz / Arad Hypothesis Roots are assigned an interpretation in the context of the first category assigning head/ phase head merged with them, which is then fixed throughout the derivation and addressed two questions: First, which head counts as a phase head for meaning assignment, the abstract eventivizing head vE or the verbal categorizing head vC? We provided evidence in favor of dissociating the two heads based on Greek characteristic state –tos verbal adjectives which lack event implications but can include verbalizing heads. We offered some evidence that verbalizing heads lacking event implications indeed serve as contexts for meaning assignment to roots that have completely unspecified meaning and are therefore not classifiable in terms of a basic typology “thing”, “event”, “state” (Harley 2005). This is in line with what Arad (2003), (2005) proposes for Hebrew. The second question concerns idiomaticity within words, what is the domain for special meaning in single word idioms. We argued that this domain is larger than the first phase head, whether we take the relevant head to be vE or vC. The boundary for special meanings is Voice, i.e. the head that syntactically projects and agent, as proposed by Marantz (1996, 1997) and contra Marantz (2001, 2007). After we wrote the first draft of this paper, it came to our attention that Marantz (2011) revises his 2001/2007 position with respect to idioms and adopts a view very close to the one argued for in the present paper. Marantz (2011) distinguishes between two meaning domains: (a) What he calls “the domain for contextual allosemy”. This is determined immediately, by the first phase head, a contentful categorizing head, vE in our terms. Marantz argues that the vC head we identify in our work on Greek participles (i.e. the verbalizer included in characteristic state –tos participles) should be viewed as a semantically null head, akin to do in English do-support, which, being semantically empty, does not block the (meaning assignment) relationship between the phase head above it (taken to be little a, the adjective forming head) and the root below it. (b) The domain for idioms. This must be separated from contextual allosemy, and it has as a boundary the Voice head that introduces the external argument, in accordance with Marantz (1996, 1997). We discuss Marantz (2011) in more 25 detail in Anagnostopoulou & Samioti (in progress), where we focus on the domains for idioms. 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