Infinitival Clauses in the Romance Languages

Guido Mensching
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Abstract

“Infinitival clauses” are constructions with a clausal status whose predicate is an infinitive. Romance infinitive clauses are mostly dependent clauses and can be divided into the following types: argumental infinitival clauses (such as subject and object clauses, the latter also including indirect interrogatives), predicative infinitival clauses, infinitival adjunct clauses, infinitival relative clauses, and nominalized infinitive clauses (with a determiner). More rarely, they appear as independent (main) clauses (root infinitival clauses) of different types, which usually have a marked character. Whereas infinitival adjunct clauses are generally preceded by prepositions, which can be argued to be outside the infinitival clause proper (i.e., the clause is part of a prepositional phrase), Romance argumental infinitive clauses are often introduced by complementizers that are diachronically derived from prepositions, mostly de/di and a/à. In most Romance languages, the infinitive itself is morphologically marked by an ending containing the morpheme {r} but lacks tense and agreement morphemes. However, some Romance languages have developed an infinitive that can be inflected for subject agreement (which is found in Portuguese, Galician, and Sardinian and also attested in Old Neapolitan). Romance languages share the property of English and other languages to leave the subject of infinitive clauses unexpressed (subject/object control, arbitrary control, and optional control) and also have raising and accusative-and-infinitive constructions. A special property of many Romance languages is the possibility of overtly expressing a nominative subject in infinitival clauses, mostly in postverbal position. The tense of the infinitive clause is usually interpreted as simultaneous or anterior to that of the matrix clause, but some matrix predicates and infinitive constructions trigger a posteriority/future reading. In addition, some Romance infinitive clauses are susceptible to constraints concerning aspect and modality.
罗曼语中的不定式从句
“不定式分句”是指谓语为不定式的结构。浪漫不定式分句多为从属分句,可分为以下几种:议论文式不定式分句(如主语和宾语分句,后者也包括间接疑问句)、谓语式不定式分句、不定式状语从句、不定式关系分句和名化不定式分句(带限定词)。更罕见的是,它们作为不同类型的独立(主)分句(根不定式分句)出现,通常具有显著的特征。不定式从句的前面通常有介词,这些介词可以被认为是不定式从句本身之外的(即,该从句是介词短语的一部分),罗曼式不定式从句通常由从介词中派生的历时补语引入,主要是de/di和a/ 。在大多数罗曼语中,不定式本身在形态上以包含语素{r}的结尾为标志,但缺乏时态和一致语素。然而,一些罗曼语已经发展出一种不定式,这种不定式可以在主语一致的情况下发生屈折变化(在葡萄牙语、加利西亚语和撒丁语中发现,在旧那不勒斯语中也得到证实)。罗曼语与英语和其他语言一样,不表达不定式从句的主语(主语/宾语控制、任意控制和可选控制),也有升高式和宾格-不定式结构。许多罗曼语的一个特殊特性是可以在不定式从句中明显地表达主格主语,主要是在后语位置。不定式从句的时态通常被解释为与矩阵从句同时或先于矩阵从句的时态,但一些矩阵谓词和不定式结构会触发后置/将来读。此外,一些浪漫主义不定式从句容易受到体裁和情态的限制。
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