Head-initial postpositional phrases in North Sámi

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Abstract

Most adpositions in North Sámi are postpositions – they follow their complements in the surface order. Nouns, on the other hand, invariably precede their complements. Strikingly, when the nominal complement of a postposition has its own complement, the complement of the noun follows after the postposition, so that the nominal phrase ends up being discontinuous,
split by the postposition. This is an indication that North Sámi postpositions are prepositions underlyingly, and that the surface order is the result of the complement of P moving to the Spec of a higher functional head. The complement of the noun is however spelled out in the lower position. Neither the complement stranding approach of Sheehan (2009) nor the FOFC of Holmberg (2000) and Biberauer et al. (2008; 2014) can fully explain this pattern. Instead, in North Sámi a more specific requirement appears to be at work, which dictates that a postposition must follow immediately after the nominal head of its complement. A similar effect is seen with possessors, which precede the possessees but also leave their complements behind in postnominal position.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationOrder and structure in syntax I
Subtitle of host publicationWord order and syntactic structure
EditorsLaura L. Bailey, Michelle Sheehan
PublisherLanguage Science Press
Pages159–176
ISBN (Electronic)978-3-96110-026-2
ISBN (Print)978-3-96110-027-9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Publication series

NameOpen Generative Syntax
Volume1

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Specific Languages

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