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Subject Raising in Chinese Modal Auxiliary Verb Constructions: A-movement or A′-movement? Cover

Subject Raising in Chinese Modal Auxiliary Verb Constructions: A-movement or A′-movement?

By: Bo Hu and  Hong Chen  
Open Access
|Jun 2022

Abstract

Subject raising in Chinese modal auxiliary verb constructions can be either A-movement or A′-movement. Modal auxiliary verbs such as hui and yao can take a nonfinite TP complement which cannot value the abstract case of the embedded subject. Hence the embedded subject must get its case valued by the matrix T and is raised to the Spec-TP of the matrix clause. This kind of raising is A-movement and is obligatory. Modal auxiliary verbs such as keneng and yinggai take a finite CP complement that can be assigned tense value by the broader context. The embedded subject can get its case valued and stay in situ. It can also be raised to the sentence-initial position by topicalization. This kind of raising is A′-movement. The A-movement and A′-movement contrast accounts for the minimal link condition in object raising, weak and strong quantificational NPs, topic stacking, and resumptive pronouns in Chinese modal auxiliary verb constructions.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/scl-2022-0003 | Journal eISSN: 2470-8275 | Journal ISSN: 1017-1274
Language: English
Page range: 39 - 71
Submitted on: Sep 4, 2020
Accepted on: Nov 26, 2021
Published on: Jun 23, 2022
Published by: The Chinese University of Hong Kong, T.T. Ng Chinese Language Research Centre
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2022 Bo Hu, Hong Chen, published by The Chinese University of Hong Kong, T.T. Ng Chinese Language Research Centre
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.