{"title":"Syntactic and semantic mismatches in English number agreement","authors":"P. Sturt","doi":"10.5070/g6011159","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In English, it is possible for a morphologically singular collective noun like ``government'' to control both singular (syntactic) agreement and plural (semantic) agreement in the same sentence (e.g. The government has praised themselves). It has been claimed that sentences with the opposite pattern of agreeing elements are ungrammatical (e.g. *The government have praised itself), and there is a corresponding asymmetry in corpus frequencies of these two configurations. Across two acceptability judgement experiments, we show that the acceptability contrast is affected by the relative order of the two agreeing elements, with degraded acceptability in the case where the first agreeing element shows plural agreement and the second shows singular agreement, relative to the opposite configuration. This pattern is found both when the agreeing verb precedes the reflexive, and when the reflexive precedes the verb. Overall, the results suggest that the initial formation of a semantic agreement dependency between an agreement target and a collective controller makes subsequent morpho-syntactic agreement with the same controller less accessible. We argue that any theoretical account of these results would require an important role for incremental processing. ","PeriodicalId":164622,"journal":{"name":"Glossa Psycholinguistics","volume":"145 2","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-11-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Glossa Psycholinguistics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5070/g6011159","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In English, it is possible for a morphologically singular collective noun like ``government'' to control both singular (syntactic) agreement and plural (semantic) agreement in the same sentence (e.g. The government has praised themselves). It has been claimed that sentences with the opposite pattern of agreeing elements are ungrammatical (e.g. *The government have praised itself), and there is a corresponding asymmetry in corpus frequencies of these two configurations. Across two acceptability judgement experiments, we show that the acceptability contrast is affected by the relative order of the two agreeing elements, with degraded acceptability in the case where the first agreeing element shows plural agreement and the second shows singular agreement, relative to the opposite configuration. This pattern is found both when the agreeing verb precedes the reflexive, and when the reflexive precedes the verb. Overall, the results suggest that the initial formation of a semantic agreement dependency between an agreement target and a collective controller makes subsequent morpho-syntactic agreement with the same controller less accessible. We argue that any theoretical account of these results would require an important role for incremental processing.
在英语中,一个形态上为单数的集体名词,如“government”,可以在同一个句子中同时控制单数(句法)和复数(语义)的一致(例如:the government has表扬他们自己)。有人声称,具有相反模式的同意元素的句子是不符合语法的(例如*政府表扬自己),并且这两种结构的语料库频率也存在相应的不对称。在两个可接受性判断实验中,我们发现可接受性对比受到两个同意元素的相对顺序的影响,相对于相反的配置,在第一个同意元素显示复数一致而第二个同意元素显示单数一致的情况下,可接受性降低。当表示同意的动词在反身动词前面,以及反身动词在动词前面时,都可以发现这种模式。总体而言,结果表明,在协议目标和集体控制器之间最初形成的语义协议依赖使得与同一控制器的后续形态语法协议更难以实现。我们认为,对这些结果的任何理论解释都需要增量处理的重要作用。