The phenomenon of unaccusativity is a central focus for the study of the complex properties of verb classes. The Unaccusative Hypothesis has provided a rich context for debating whether syntactic behavior is semantically or lexically determined, the consequence of syntactic context, or a combination of these factors. No consensus has been reached. This book combines new approaches to the subject with several papers that have achieved a significant status, though formally unpublished.
Series editors' preface
Introduction,
Artemis Alexiadou, Elena Anagnostopoulou and Martin Everaert1. A Semantics for unaccusatives and its syntactic consequences,
Gennaro Chierchia2. Unaccusativity as telicity checking,
Angeliek van Hout3. Unergative adjectives and psych-verbs,
Hans Bennis4. Voice morphology in the causative-inchoative alternation: evidence for a non unified structural analysis of unaccusatives,
Artemis Alexiadou and Elena Anagnostopoulou5. Unaccusative syntax and verbal alternations,
David Embick6. Against an unaccusative analysis of reflexives,
Tanya Reinhart and Tal Siloni7. Unaccusatives and anticausatives in German,
Markus Steinbach8. Syntactic unaccusativity in Russian,
Maaike Schoorlemmer9. Gradience at the lexicon-syntax interface: evidence from auxiliary selection,
Antonella Sorace10. Unaccusativity in Saramaccan: the syntax of resultatives,
Tonjes Veenstra11. The grammar machine,
Hagit Borer12. Acquiring unaccusativity: a cross-linguistic look,
Janet Randall, Angeliek van Hout, Juergen Weissenborn and Harald BaayenIndex
This is a very valuable volume on the topic of unaccusativity. The editors have introduced expertly the volume, the phenomenon, and its analyses. --
Language Despite the very high standard of the papers, the volume reads easily, is well-organized, coherl“I