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LFG Proceedings
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Sometimes it's hard to be Coherent

Elizabeth E. Coppock

Abstract

The paper provides an analysis of the construction in Hungarian known as "focus raising", illustrated below.

János-tmond-t-amhogyjön
John-ACCsay-PAST-1.SGthatcome.3.SG

`It is John that I said is coming.'

In focus raising, the focus of the matrix clause is identified with a grammatical function in the embedded clause. Focus raising is particularly interesting because of the case marking on focus-raised subjects. Rather than having nominative case (unmarked), they appear suffixed by the accusative marker, -t, as shown in the example. This fact is analyzed in the paper as follows.

A pattern of variation among Hungarian speakers observed by Gervain (2002) shows that this athematic object function may host either functional or anaphoric binders for the embedded clause subject. Anaphoric binding from an athematic position leads to a violation of the semantic Coherence condition (Dalrymple 2001, p. 243), but this condition still appears to apply in other cases. Therefore, an Optimality-Theoretic treatment is proposed, in which the semantic Coherence condition is a violable constraint.

References

Dalrymple, Mary (2001). Lexical Functional Grammar. Academic Press.

Gervain, Judit (2002). Linguistic methodology and microvariation in language: the case of operator-raising in Hungarian. Ms. University of Szeged, Hungary.

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