Abstract
This paper provides an in-depth analysis of the semantic and syntactic properties of all-clefts (All I ate for dinner was a salad). The main characteristic of all-clefts is the inference that what is designated by the cleft is not much (the “smallness effect”). On the basis of novel observations on all-clefts with multi-clausal precopular clauses, and the interaction with negation and questions, I argue for three claims: (i) the word all is the head of a relative clause (not a free relative), (ii) the precopular clause is derived by syntactic movement, and (iii) the source of the smallness effect is the mirativity of only (Beaver & Clark 2008; Zeevat 2009). The little formal work that exists on all-clefts (Homer 2019) does not offer an analysis that reflects these three claims. Instead I propose a derivational account of all-clefts based on Boeckx (2007)
Original language | English |
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Article number | 111 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-25 |
Number of pages | 25 |
Journal | Glossa |
Volume | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2020 |
Keywords
- clefts
- all
- smallness effect
- relative clauses
- exclusives
- only