1st Edition

Category Neutrality A Type-Logical Investigation

By Neil Whitman Copyright 2005
    334 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    334 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    "Feature neutrality" is an issue that has received much attention among linguists. For example, consider the sentence, "I have never, and will never, put my name on this document." Here, the verb 'put' acts simultaneously as a past participle (as in "have never put") and a base form (as in "will never put"), and is therefore said to be neutral between the two forms. Similar examples have been found for many languages.
    The accepted wisdom is that neutrality is possible only for morphosyntactic features such as verb form, gender, number, declension class-not at the level of gross syntactic category, where the semantic differences are more significant. In other words, it has been claimed that "category neutrality," where a word or phrase is used simultaneously with more than one syntactic category, does not exist. (A famous example is the glaring ungrammaticality of this sentence, in which "can" is used simultaneously as a main verb and auxiliary verb: "I can tuna and get a new job.") In this book, however, Neal Whitman shows that category neutrality does exist in English. This not only challenges the current thinking, but also raises foundational questions about the nature of ambiguity.

    Acknowledgements List of Tables List of Figures Introduction Chapter 1: Empirical Background Chapter 2: Theoretical Background Chapter 3: Neutrality and Mixed-wh interrogatives Chapter 4: Neutrality and Verbal Argument Alternatives Chapter 5: Neutrality and Predicative Phrases Chapter 6: Category Neutrality and Adverbial Nouns Conclusion Appendix A: Attestations of Mixed-wh interrogatives Appendix B: Questionnaire items Bibliography Index

    Biography

    Neil Whitman received his Ph.D. in Linguistics from The Ohio State University in 2002.