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Norwegian (non-V2) declaratives, resumptive elements, and the Wackernagel position

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 September 2011

Kristin Melum Eide*
Affiliation:
Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Scandinavian Languages and Comparative Literature, Dragvoll, 7491 Trondheim, Norway. [email protected]
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Abstract

Most Norwegian declaratives are subject-initial verb second (V2) clauses. This paper discusses declaratives that can be construed as non-V2, two constructions that have traditionally been analyzed as left dislocation phenomena: the (adjunctive) -construction and the Copy Left Dislocation (CLD) construction, where the ‘copy’ is a weak pronoun. Both constructions share an affinity to root clauses, have particular scope effects, and employ a prosodically light particle between the topicalized phrase and the finite verb in V2 ( and a weak pronoun, respectively). The paper attributes these properties to the fact that the relevant particles are topic markers of a particular kind; they mark A-topics. A-Topics signal a topic-shift in the conversation and are confined to clauses with illocutionary force (Bianchi & Frascarelli 2010). The aforementioned particles are much more frequent in spoken contexts than in written prose, and I propose that this is because they depend on prosody. They are obligatorily light, and they occur in the part of the clause that has traditionally been described as ‘the Wackernagel position’. Wackernagel (1892) proposed that certain prosodically light elements (clitics in particular) tend to occur in the second position in Indo-European languages. Although the resumptive elements of the -construction and especially of CLDs may not be fully-fledged clitics, like clitics, they appear in the second position of declaratives.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Nordic Association of Linguistics 2011

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