1 Introduction
One of the most important results of work in syntax has been a detailed empirical and, to some extent, theoretical understanding of the argument/adjunct distinction. Thus, it is now known that arguments and adjuncts differ systematically along multiple dimensions:
(1) | a. | Obligatoriness/optionality: Arguments can be obligatory or optional. Adjuncts are always syntactically optional.1 |
b. | Iterability: Adjuncts are iterable. (To a [host + adjunct] structure, another adjunct of the same type can typically be added: Hornstein & Nunes 2008.) Arguments are not iterable. | |
c. | L(exical) selection: A head H can L-select the head of a phrase XP if XP is an argument of H, but not if XP is an adjunct (Pesetsky 1991; Merchant 2019). |
For many more argument/adjunct asymmetries, some seldom discussed, see Toivonen (n.d.). The argument/adjunct distinction, then, underlies a wide array of superficially very different phenomena, indicating that it runs deep in syntax, as is generally acknowledged.2 This being so, any phenomena that appear to blur or challenge the argument/adjunct distinction deserve careful scrutiny, to determine whether our understanding of it needs revising, and what their etiology is.
This squib investigates a phenomenon of just that type: apparent in situ mixed wh-coordination. It proceeds as follows. Section 2 sets the stage by discussing (left-peripheral) mixed wh-coordination, in which an argument and an adjunct wh-phrase appear to be coordinated, and reviews one existing analysis of it, on which it actually does not challenge the argument/adjunct distinction. Section 3 introduces the main phenomenon investigated here—apparent in situ mixed wh-coordination (ISMW)—and shows that it initially appears more problematic for the argument/adjunct distinction than its non-in-situ counterpart.
Section 4 develops two analyses of ISMW: the Wh-Coordination Analysis (on which the conjuncts are the wh-phrases) and the VP-Coordination Analysis (on which the conjuncts are VPs whose head Vs undergo across-the-board movement to v). It is shown that the VP- but not the Wh-Coordination Analysis is compatible with our understanding of the argument/adjunct distinction, and involves an unremarkable derivation that is difficult to rule out; consequently, the former is conceptually preferable. That section then tests some empirical predictions of the two analyses, showing that, in all three cases considered, the VP- but not the Wh-Coordination Analysis makes the right prediction. Section 5, the conclusion, lays out the main finding: that a phenomenon (ISMW) that initially appears seriously problematic for the argument/adjunct distinction actually is not, a theoretically welcome result.
2 Setting the stage: Mixed wh-coordination
As is known, many overt-wh-movement languages permit apparent coordination of an argument and an adjunct wh-phrase in the left periphery (Browne 1972; Whitman 2002; Gračanin Yuksek 2007; Zhang 2007; Lipták 2011; Citko 2013; Citko & Gračanin-Yuksek 2013; Larson 2013; Melchin & Toivonen 2018; a.m.o.):
(2) | a. | What and when did Mary eat? |
b. | When and what did Mary eat? |
This would be problematic for the argument/adjunct distinction if, in such mixed wh-coordinations, either the adjunct wh-phrase never occupied an adjunct position or the argument wh-phrase never occupied an argument position. For example, if what and when in (2-a) originated as the complement of V and moved to [Spec,CP], then at no derivational stage would when be adjoined to anything, contra the standard view that when is an adjunct.
Fortunately, though, a number of analyses of mixed wh-coordination avoid that consequence. To mention just one, Citko & Gračanin-Yuksek (2013) argue that, in English mixed wh-coordinations, the conjuncts are actually CPs. In (2-a), what originates as the complement of V, and when originates in an adjunct position, as usual. Then, what moves to [Spec,CP] in one of the CP conjuncts, and when moves to [Spec,CP] in the other CP conjunct. The reader is referred to their paper for detailed discussion.3 What is important here is that, despite appearances, mixed wh-coordinations like (2a–b) do not seriously threaten the argument/adjunct distinction, because they do not force the conclusion that certain “adjunct” wh-phrases never occupy adjunct positions (at any derivational stage), or the parallel conclusion about “argument” wh-phrases.
3 The phenomenon: Apparent in situ mixed wh-coordination
There is, however, another type of mixed wh-coordination (almost unmentioned in the literature, though see Grosu 1985: 236–237 for two possible examples, and Kasai 2016 on Japanese) that initially appears much more problematic for the argument/adjunct distinction. In this type, an argument and an adjunct wh-phrase appear to be coordinated in situ ((3)–(4)). This phenomenon will be referred to here as apparent in situ mixed wh-coordination (ISMW—apparent because it is argued below that the conjuncts are actually VPs).4
(3) | a. | Mary ate WHAT and WHEN to impress Sue?! |
b. | Mary ate WHEN and WHAT to impress Sue?! |
(4) | a. | Mary ate WHAT and WHERE to impress Sue?! |
b. | Mary ate WHERE and WHAT to impress Sue?! |
Of course, the adjunct to impress Sue is not obligatory; it is included in (3)–(4) to control for a potential confound. Consider (3-a) without it:
(5) | Mary ate WHAT and WHEN?! |
Someone who wanted to deny that (5) involves (apparent) in situ mixed wh-coordination could argue that it involves CP-coordination with sluicing:
(6) | [CP Mary ate WHAT] and [CP WHEN did Mary eat it]?! |
But whatever the merits of (6) as a parse for (5), no analogous parse is available for (3-a). In (3-a), to impress Sue modifies (a verbal projection containing at least) eat WHAT and WHEN. On standard assumptions, this indicates that eat WHAT and WHEN is a constituent in (3-a):
(7) | Mary [[ate WHAT and WHEN] to impress Sue]?! |
A defender of the CP-coordination-plus-sluicing analysis might argue that to impress Sue is adjoined to the entire coordinate structure:
(8) | [ConjP [ConjP [CP Mary ate WHAT] and [CP WHEN did Mary eat it]] to impress Sue]?! |
However, replacing Sue with Mary’s brother yields a Condition C violation, indicating that Mary c-commands the infinitival adjunct and ruling out the structure in (8):
(9) | Maryi ate WHAT and WHEN to impress {heri/*Mary’si} brother?! |
Sentence (3-a) therefore cannot have a structure along the lines of (6): its structure must be as in (7).5
But this raises the question of how an argument and an adjunct wh-phrase can (apparently) be coordinated in situ. The question is important, because (7) gives the impression that perhaps when is not in an adjunct position, or what is not in an argument position, contra what the argument/adjunct distinction leads us to expect.
3.1 A note on the crosslinguistic landscape
Before we analyze ISMW, it will be worth noting that ISMW also occurs in (at least) Kuria, Dholuo, Spanish, and German ((10)–(13)). This indicates that ISMW (along with the apparent problem it poses for the argument/adjunct distinction) is not an English-specific quirk, but a phenomenon of much broader crosslinguistic import.6
- (10)
- Kuria (Grosu 1985: 236)
- John
- John
- aragire
- eats
- nke
- what
- na
- and
- ake?
- where
- ‘What and where does John eat?’
- (11)
- Dholuo (Grosu 1985: 237)
- John
- John
- chamo
- eats
- ang’o
- what
- kod
- and
- kanye?
- where
- ‘What and where does John eat?’
- (12)
- Spanish
- María
- Mary
- bebió
- drank
- {QUÉ
- {what
- y
- and
- CUÁNDO
- when
- /
- /
- %CUÁNDO
- when
- y
- and
- QUÉ}
- what}
- para
- for
- impresionar
- to.impress
- a
- A
- Juan?!
- John
- ‘Mary drank {WHAT and WHEN/WHEN and WHAT} to impress John?!’
- (13)
- German7
- Marie
- Mary
- hat
- has
- {WAS
- {what
- und
- and
- WANN
- when
- /
- /
- WANN
- when
- und
- and
- WAS}
- what}
- gegessen?!
- eaten
- ‘Mary ate {WHAT and WHEN/WHEN and WHAT}?!’
4 Two possible analyses: Wh-coordination and VP-coordination
We can now ask how ISMW sentences are derived—and, in particular, why they seem to allow coordination of argument and adjunct wh-phrases. Consider again the following example (= (3-a)):
(14) | Mary ate WHAT and WHEN to impress Sue?! |
Two possible analyses of ISMW are the following:
(15) | a. | Wh-Coordination Analysis: The conjuncts are the wh-phrases. (The argument and the adjunct wh-phrase are truly coordinated.) |
b. | VP-Coordination Analysis: The conjuncts are VPs. (Their head Vs undergo across-the-board head movement to v, making the VP-coordination look like wh-coordination on the surface.) |
The relevant (partial) derivations follow:8
- (16)
- Partial derivation of (14): Wh-Coordination Analysis
- (17)
- Partial derivation of (14): VP-Coordination Analysis
All else being equal, the VP-Coordination Analysis predicts that there should be free apparent in situ argument/adjunct coordination with non-wh conjuncts. This is incorrect:
(18) | *Mary ate oysters and at strange times. |
But all else is not equal. Grosu (1985) argues that these structures are subject to a semantic constraint: the conjuncts must “include focused operators of a common type” (231). When they do, these structures become acceptable:
(19) | a. | Mary ate only oysters and only at strange times. |
b. | Mary ate the most exotic oysters and at the strangest times. |
The source of this constraint deserves further investigation.
Now, with the Wh- and VP-Coordination Analyses spelled out, we can begin to determine which is superior. The discussion will proceed as follows. Section 4.1 argues that the VP- but not the Wh-Coordination Analysis is compatible with our understanding of the argument/adjunct distinction, and involves an unremarkable derivation that it would take something special to rule out—and therefore the former is conceptually preferable. Section 4.2 argues on several grounds that the VP-Coordination Analysis is also superior empirically.
4.1 Conceptual considerations
The VP-Coordination Analysis, but not the Wh-Coordination Analysis, is compatible with our current understanding of the argument/adjunct distinction. Consider why.
On the VP-Coordination Analysis (17), what is the complement of V in the first VP conjunct, and when is adjoined to V(P) within the second VP conjunct. That is, what and when respectively originate in an argument position and an adjunct position. This is perfectly compatible with the standard view that what and when are an argument and an adjunct wh-phrase, respectively, and thus with our understanding of the argument/adjunct distinction.
Viewed against the background of the argument/adjunct distinction, the Wh-Coordination Analysis is much more troublesome. Consider the specific implementation of this analysis in (16). The analysis of what seems unproblematic. What is a conjunct within a ConjP in an argument position (complement-of-V position). Since coordinate structures generally have the same distribution as their conjuncts do when they occur independently, this is expected for an argument wh-phrase like what.9 Now consider the analysis of when in (16). When itself is not in an adjunct position but in an argument position: the complement position of Conj. But this is unproblematic, since traditional adjuncts can be coordinated (She works skillfully and efficiently). What is far more problematic is that the coordinate structure of which when is a conjunct is also not in an adjunct position. On the analysis in (16), then, when is completely divorced from adjuncthood: neither it nor the coordinate structure of which it is a conjunct is in an adjunct position, contra the standard and well-motivated view that when is an adjunct wh-phrase. The Wh-Coordination Analysis is thus not straightforwardly compatible with our current understanding of the argument/adjunct distinction.10
Given the robustness of the argument/adjunct distinction and its near-centrality to the theory of syntax, these considerations indicate that the VP-Coordination Analysis is conceptually preferable to the Wh-Coordination Analysis.
Furthermore, as a reviewer notes, the derivation in (17) is quite unremarkable in the current theoretical context. All else being equal, we expect it to be available: it would take something special to rule it out.
The next subsection shows that the VP-Coordination Analysis is also superior empirically.
4.2 Empirical predictions of the two analyses
We now turn to some empirical predictions of the VP- and Wh-Coordination Analyses. The investigation will proceed as follows. Section 4.2.1 tests the predictions of the two analyses about whether ISMW should permit obligatorily transitive verbs. Section 4.2.2 tests their predictions about what types of (non-wh) adverbs should be possible within the coordinate structure. Finally, Section 4.2.3 tests their predictions about whether there should be (apparent) in situ coordination of argument wh-phrases with different θ-roles.
For convenience, the sample ISMW sentence in (3-a) is repeated in (20), and the structures assigned to it by the Wh- and VP-Coordination Analyses are repeated in (21)–(22):
(20) | Mary ate WHAT and WHEN to impress Sue?! |
- (21)
- Partial derivation of (20): Wh-Coordination Analysis
- (22)
- Partial derivation of (20): VP-Coordination Analysis
4.2.1 Prediction A: Obligatorily transitive verbs
The Wh- and VP-Coordination Analyses make different predictions about whether ISMW should be possible with obligatorily transitive verbs (cf. Whitman 2002; 2004; Gračanin Yuksek 2007; Citko 2013):
(23) | a. | Wh-Coordination: ISMW should be possible with an obligatorily transitive verb. |
b. | VP-Coordination: ISMW should be impossible with an obligatorily transitive verb. |
The subprediction in (23-b) is straightforward. If eat in (22) is replaced with an obligatorily transitive V like devour, the devour in the second conjunct will lack a direct object; thus, the resulting structure should be unacceptable.
That the Wh-Coordination Analysis makes the prediction in (23-a) is initially less obvious. But consider (21). On the Wh-Coordination Analysis, why is it possible for [ConjP what and when] in (21) to be the complement of the V eat? It cannot be because of when, since eat does not select adverbials like when. Rather, it must be because of what. That is, the Wh-Coordination Analysis must posit that a V that can select what (e.g., eat: Mary ate WHAT?!) can also select a ConjP with what as one of its conjuncts. Because obligatorily transitive verbs like devour can also select what (Mary devoured WHAT?!), the Wh-Coordination Analysis predicts that they should also be able to select ConjPs like what and when, giving rise to ISMW with obligatorily transitive verbs.
It turns out, however, that obligatorily transitive verbs are impossible in ISMW:11
(24) | a. | *Mary devoured WHAT and WHEN to impress Sue?! |
b. | **Mary devoured WHEN and WHAT to impress Sue?! |
(25) | a. | *Mary congratulated WHO and WHERE to annoy Sue?! |
b. | **Mary congratulated WHERE and WHO to annoy Sue?! |
This provides an argument for the VP- and against the Wh-Coordination Analysis.12
4.2.2 Prediction B: Adverb insertion
The Wh- and VP-Coordination Analyses also make different predictions about what types of adverbs should be able to follow the first wh-phrase in ISMW:
(26) | a. | Wh-Coordination: If an adverb immediately follows the first wh-phrase in ISMW, it should also be able to immediately follow that wh-phrase when the latter is in the left periphery. |
b. | VP-Coordination: It may well be possible for an adverb to immediately follow the first wh-phrase in ISMW that cannot immediately follow that wh-phrase when the latter is in the left periphery. |
Consider why. On the Wh-Coordination Analysis, the conjuncts are the wh-phrases. Therefore, if an adverb immediately follows the first wh-phrase, it must be right-adjoined to it (assuming there is no left-adjunction to the mother of Conj—the traditional “Conj”). And if that wh-phrase allows a particular right-adjunct when it is in [Spec,ConjP], then it is fully expected to also allow that right-adjunct when it is in the left periphery.
On the VP-Coordination Analysis, by contrast, the conjuncts in ISMW are VPs. Therefore, an adverb immediately following the first wh-phrase need not be right-adjoined to it: it may instead be right-adjoined to the first VP conjunct. Consequently, it is perfectly possible that the adverb will not be able to immediately follow that wh-phrase when the latter is in the left periphery: this is what is expected if the adverb is able to adjoin to VPs but not to wh-phrases.
The correct prediction, it turns out, is (26-b). Thus, the adverb greedily can immediately follow the first conjunct (what) in the following ISMWs:13
(27) | a. | MMary ate WHAT greedily and WHEN to impress John?! |
b. | MMary ate WHAT greedily and WHERE to impress John?! |
But it cannot immediately follow what when the latter is left-peripheral:
(28) | What (*greedily) (and {when/where}) did Mary eat to impress John? |
The same holds in the corresponding embedded questions (where, as in (27), the linearly first wh-phrase immediately follows a verb):
(29) | I wonder what (*greedily) (and {when/where}) Mary ate to impress John. |
Likewise, publicly can immediately follow the first conjunct (with whom) in the following ISMWs:
(30) | a. | MMary spoke WITH WHOM publicly and WHEN to annoy John?! |
b. | MMary spoke WITH WHOM publicly and WHERE to annoy John?! |
But it cannot immediately follow with whom in the left periphery:
(31) | a. | With whom (*publicly) (and {when/where}) did Mary speak to annoy John? |
b. | I wonder with whom (*publicly) (and {when/where}) Mary spoke to annoy John. |
In the examples discussed so far in this subsection, the first wh-phrase has been an argument wh-phrase, but analogous asymmetries are observed when the first wh-phrase is an adjunct wh-phrase. Thus, publicly can immediately follow the first conjunct (when or where) in the following ISMWs:
(32) | a. | MMary spoke WHEN publicly and WITH WHOM to annoy John?! |
b. | MMary spoke WHERE publicly and WITH WHOM to annoy John?! |
But it cannot immediately follow when or where in the left periphery:
(33) | a. | {When/Where} (*publicly) (and with whom) did Mary speak to annoy John? |
b. | I wonder {when/where} (*publicly) (and with whom) Mary spoke to annoy John. |
The distribution of adverbs in ISMWs, then, provides a second argument for the VP- and against the Wh-Coordination Analysis.14
4.2.3 Prediction C: Coordination of argument wh-phrases with different θ-roles
The discussion so far has focused on apparent in situ coordination of argument and adjunct wh-phrases. However, the Wh- and VP-Coordination Analyses also make different predictions about whether there should be apparent in situ coordination of argument wh-phrases with different θ-roles (cf. Whitman 2002; 2004; Citko 2013):
(34) | a. | Wh-Coordination: Argument wh-phrases with different θ-roles should not be coordinable in situ. |
b. | VP-Coordination: Argument wh-phrases with different θ-roles should be (apparently) coordinable in situ. |
On the Wh-Coordination Analysis, the entire ConjP is in an argument position of V. Therefore, the entire ConjP should receive a θ-role from V; there is no way for the individual conjuncts to receive θ-roles, let alone different ones (Zhang 2007, §2.2.1).15
On the VP-Coordination Analysis, by contrast, the conjuncts are VPs. Therefore, if the V that undergoes across-the-board head movement is one that can assign more than one type of θ-role, then it should be able to assign different θ-roles within the two VP conjuncts.
One such V is serve (Whitman 2004):
(35) | Mary served {WHO/WHAT}?! | (who = Goal; what = Theme) |
Significantly, apparent in situ coordination of these two types of objects of serve is possible, if slightly marked ((36)). (See Whitman 2004: 427–428 and Citko 2013: 306 for related observations.)
(36) | MMary served {WHO and WHAT/WHAT and WHO} at the hotel?! |
Two more examples of apparent in situ coordination of argument wh-phrases with different θ-roles are given below:
(37) | a. | Mary spoke WITH WHOM and ABOUT WHAT to annoy Sue?! |
b. | Mary spoke ABOUT WHAT and WITH WHOM to annoy Sue?! |
Sentences like (36)–(37) provide a third argument for the VP- and against the Wh-Coordination Analysis.16
5 Conclusion
This squib has examined the almost uninvestigated phenomenon of apparent in situ mixed wh-coordination (ISMW), in which an argument and an adjunct wh-phrase appear to be coordinated in situ rather than in the left periphery. ISMW differs from left-peripheral mixed wh-coordination in that the former initially appears difficult to reconcile with the argument/adjunct distinction. Two possible analyses of ISMW were considered: the Wh-Coordination Analysis, on which the conjuncts are the wh-phrases, and the VP-Coordination Analysis, on which the conjuncts are VPs whose head Vs undergo across-the-board head movement to v. The VP- but not the Wh-Coordination Analysis is compatible with our understanding of the argument/adjunct distinction, and involves an unremarkable derivation that it would take a stipulation to rule out.
The VP-Coordination Analysis is also superior empirically, judging by evidence involving (a) obligatorily transitive verbs, (b) adverb insertion, and (c) apparent in situ coordination of argument wh-phrases with different θ-roles. This being so, ISMW does not in fact threaten the argument/adjunct distinction, despite appearances—a theoretically most welcome result, given how fundamental to syntax the argument/adjunct distinction appears to be.
Abbreviations
A = personal a (Spanish), M = marked
Notes
- There are apparent cases of obligatory adjuncts (Grimshaw & Vikner 1993; Goldberg & Ackerman 2001; Sailor & Schütze 2013; Melchin & Toivonen 2018), but most of the relevant constraints appear to be semanticopragmatic, and the remaining cases likely do not involve true structural adjuncts. [^]
- For formal definitions of Adjoin and Merge that account for some of these argument/adjunct asymmetries, see Merchant (2014: 3; 2019: 326). To my knowledge, no existing definitions of these operations account for all of them. [^]
- On their analysis, did, Mary, and eat in (2-a) are realized only once (though (2-a) involves full CP coordination) because they are multidominated, each having a mother in each of the two CP conjuncts. [^]
- Citko (2013) claims English disallows in situ wh-coordination, citing examples like (i):
For me, (i) is acceptable, though semantically complex, a possible answer being On Monday, Katie ate steak at Giovanni’s, and Mike ate fish at home. To avoid the complexity of examples like (i), this squib investigates ISMW in echo questions, which contain one fewer wh-phrase. I assume wh-phrases in echo questions do not move covertly (or, if they do, their movement is exempt from the Coordinate Structure Constraint). For one reviewer, ISMW in echo questions is particularly acceptable “when their echo nature is primed”:
(i) (judgment from Citko 2013: 301) *Who ate what and where on Monday? [^](ii) You said that Mary ate WHAT and WHEN to impress Sue?! - Two other conceivable analyses of (i) (= (3-a)) are easily dismissed.
First, (i) could be a variant of (ii) (involving CP-coordination with sluicing) in which and WHEN is inserted into the first conjunct as a parenthetical (cf. Lipták 2011):
(i) Mary ate WHAT and WHEN to impress Sue?! This analysis, though plausible for (iii), fails for (i), in which and WHEN is not prosodically parentheticalized.(ii) Mary ate WHAT to impress Sue?! And WHEN?! Secondly, (i) could involve CP-coordination, with multidomination of everything except WHAT and WHEN. But this predicts that the putatively multidominated material should be linearly contiguous (Citko & Gračanin-Yuksek 2013: 4, (6c)); in fact, some of it precedes WHAT and WHEN and the rest follows it. [^](iii) Mary ate WHAT—and WHEN—to impress Sue?! - Mandarin lacks ISMW, however (Zhang 2007: 2138). Examples (10)–(11) unfortunately lack a clause-final adjunct (e.g., ‘to impress Mary’), so they may involve CP-coordination with sluicing (cf. (6)) rather than true ISMW. [^]
- No clause-final adjunct is included here, since the clause-finality of V rules out a CP-coordination-plus-sluicing derivation. [^]
- The VP-Coordination Analysis is briefly proposed by Zhang (2007: 2136, fn. 1) for examples like (i):
This squib extends the VP-Coordination Analysis to ISMW, arguing for it and against the Wh-Coordination Analysis on a number of conceptual and empirical grounds. Coordinate structures are assumed here for concreteness to be ConjPs (Johannessen 1998, a.m.o.), but little to nothing will hinge on this. [^]
(i) Grosu (1985: 232) John writes only funny letters and only to funny people. - Furthermore, on the ConjP analysis of coordinate structures, what is itself in an argument position: [Spec, ConjP]. [^]
- One might wonder whether the Wh-Coordination Analysis could be improved by positing that the ConjP is not the complement of the V eat, but adjoined to the V(P) eat:
Unfortunately, (i) suffers from a problem that is approximately the mirror image of the problem with (16). The treatment of when is unproblematic, because it is a conjunct within a ConjP in an adjunct position, which is expected behavior for an adjunct wh-phrase. However, although the ConjP is an adjunct, its first conjunct (what) is an “argument” wh-phrase. This is unlikely to be possible, because what cannot be an adjunct on its own:
(i) … [VP [V(P) eat] [ConjP what and when]] And crucially, a phrase (e.g., the morning) that can be an argument ((iii-a)) but not an adjunct ((iii-b)) cannot be a conjunct within a coordinate structure in an adjunct position ((iii-d)):(ii) Mary ate steak (*WHAT)?! [^](iii) a. Let’s discuss the morning. b. *Let’s discuss it the morning. c. Let’s discuss it in the {morning/afternoon}. d. *Let’s discuss it the morning and in the afternoon. - These sentences must be read in a prosodically integrated manner. Unlike (24-a), (i) is acceptable:
But (i) is presumably a variant of (ii) (which involves CP-coordination plus sluicing) in which and WHEN is inserted into the first conjunct as a parenthetical (cf. Lipták 2011), and therefore irrelevant to the analysis of ISMW.
(i) Mary devoured WHAT—and WHEN—to impress Sue?! Presumably the (b)-sentences in (24)–(25) are even worse than the (a)-sentences because the (a)-sentences at least contain locally well-formed strings like Mary devoured WHAT, unlike the (b)-sentences (*Mary devoured WHEN). [^](ii) Mary devoured WHAT to impress Sue?! And WHEN?! - The VP-Coordination Analysis also predicts, correctly, that ISMW should allow double-object verbs whose objects are both optional:
[^]
(i) Mary paid him HOW MUCH and WHEN to impress Sue?! - Sentences like (27a–b) are slightly marked (M). In the default version of, e.g., (27-a), the adverb follows both conjuncts:
Crucially, though, there is a sharp contrast between (27a–b) and the unacceptable versions of (28). Of 13 native speakers consulted, 12 judged *What greedily and when did Mary eat to impress John? much worse than (27-a). (The thirteenth rejected both.) [^]
(i) Mary ate WHAT and WHEN greedily to impress John?! - On the VP-Coordination Analysis, the adverbs in ISMWs like (27a–b) are VP-adjoined. Therefore, only low adverbs (e.g., greedily, publicly) should occur in the relevant position: high adverbs should be barred. This is correct:
[^]
(i) Mary ate WHAT (*probably/*fortunately/*perhaps) and WHEN to impress John?! - This is true (barring stipulative additional assumptions) both on traditional θ-theory and on Heim and Kratzer’s (1998) approach. [^]
- Kasai (2016) investigates apparent wh-coordination, including ISMW, in Japanese, a wh-in-situ language. On his analysis, as on the present one, the conjuncts are not the wh-phrases but verbal projections. The illusion that the conjuncts are the wh-phrases is attributed by Kasai to backward ellipsis, not across-the-board head movement. Nonetheless, Kasai’s investigation provides consilient crosslinguistic evidence that ISMW involves coordination of verbal projections, not wh-phrases. [^]
Acknowledgements
Thanks to the reviewers for valuable feedback, and to numerous colleagues for Spanish and German help. The usual disclaimers apply.
Funding Information
This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program under Grant No. DGE-1339067. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
Competing Interests
The author has no competing interests to declare.
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