‘Verb floating’ and VP-ellipsis: Towards a movement account of ellipsis licensing

Gary Thoms

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

In this paper I propose that ellipsis is licensed by overt movement. Examining variation in VP-ellipsis across English dialects, I show that movement is crucially implicated in whether or not a given element can license ellipsis. I discuss well-known restrictions on VP-ellipsis and present new data that shows that a movement-based account of these restrictions is superior to previous ones. I show that the proposed account can be extended to other cases involving A′ movement with empirical benefits, and I conclude by sketching the technical implementation of the theory, arguing that ellipsis is a ‘repair’ operation that prevents a linearization failure following non-deletion of a lower copy. I suggest that types of movement that are unable to spell out lower copies (i.e. A-movement) do not license ellipsis, thus explaining ellipsis licensing in terms of general conditions on copy deletion
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)255-300
Number of pages45
JournalLinguistic Variation Yearbook
Volume10
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • ellipsis licensing
  • VP-ellipsis
  • sluicing
  • Copy Theory of Movement
  • A/A′-distinction

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