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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton February 12, 2008

Specificational sentences and word order in Romance: A functional analysis

  • Karen Lahousse EMAIL logo
From the journal Folia Linguistica

Abstract

It has often been claimed that certain verb-subject configurations can convey a specificational meaning, but it has not been previously shown that they can also have the same syntactico-semantic and discourse properties as other types of sentences which mainly have a specificational meaning, such as clefts and pseudoclefts. In this article I examine Verb – Object – Subject (VOS) word order in Romance, and show that it shares the syntactic and semantic properties of specificational sentences. I also provide a description of the discourse functions of VOS in French, Spanish and Italian, and conclude that these differ significantly in each of the three languages. I argue that such differences follow naturally from the specificational nature of VOS clauses, and reflect the different functional types of specificational sentences attested cross-linguistically.


*Author's addressFaculty of Arts, Department of Linguistics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Blijde-Inkomststraat 21, PO Box 3308, B–3000 Leuven, Belgium.

Received: 2007-07-06
Revised: 2007-08-12
Accepted: 2007-09-06
Published Online: 2008-02-12
Published in Print: 2007-11-20

© Walter de Gruyter

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