Jason M. Brenier, Laura A. Michaelis
Optimization via syntactic amalgam: Syntax-prosody mismatch and copula doubling
Many linguists have observed the emergence of the
nonstandard English construction instantiated by the following sentence: “Now
the problem is // is that nobody’s going to invade anybody else’s boundaries”.
In this pattern (which we will refer to as ISIS), a clausal complement is
preceded by two finite forms of the copula, the first of which is typically
prosodically prominent and followed by a major intonational break. While Massam
(1999), among others, views ISIS as a variant of Pseudocleft, we see two
problems with this approach. First, there are distributional and
discourse-pragmatic properties that distinguish ISIS from Pseudocleft, including
the referential status of the subject NP and the topic-focus articulation of the
clause. We will argue that ISIS, rather than being an instance of the
Pseudocleft pattern, is a syntactic amalgam that is closely related to an
appositive pattern that we will refer to as Hypotactic Apposition, e. g.,
That’s the real problem is that you never really know. Second, the
Massam analysis fails to explain why a speaker would select ISIS over a simpler
and more compositional alternative construction, which we will refer to as
Simplex: The problem is // there’s nothing else to buy. Using
prosodically labeled data from the Switchboard corpus, we show that this choice
involves optimization: Simplex has prosodic defects that ISIS repairs. In
Simplex tokens the copula is typically followed by a break, creating
misalignment of prosodic and syntactic phrases (Croft 1995; Watson and Gibson
2003); it is also typically prosodically prominent, although function words
otherwise receive prominence only by deflection of accent from a discourse-old
complement (Ladd 1995). While the Simplex copula performs double duty (as focus
marker and as VP head) ISIS allocates these functions to the two respective
copulas. Nevertheless, ISIS is far rarer than Simplex. If we view ISIS as a
repair strategy, rather than a mere overgeneralization of the Pseudocleft
pattern, this fact makes sense.
Corpus Linguistics and Lingustic Theory, Walter de Gruyter
Print ISSN: 1613-7027
Volume: 1, 05/2005
Pages: 45 - 88
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