In this paper we focus on the ability of Argument
Supporting Nominalizations (ASNs) to realize
morphological plural. We think that this aspect of their behavior is
instrumental in our understanding of their properties and their syntax within
one language and across languages. Our factual investigation deals with
Romanian, English, German and Spanish, as well as Polish and Bulgarian ASNs. We
show that the interplay between the aspectual properties – either
inner or outer aspect – and the nominal/verbal
characteristics, as justifying the internal structure of ASNs, allows us to
characterize the ability of ASNs to accept plural marking across languages. We
further argue for a flexible syntactic theory that enables us to capture the
mixed properties of ASNs. We provide evidence for two parameters of variation.
The first parameter is whether ASNs involve a nominalizer or not. If a
nominalizer is not included, ASNs lack nominal internal properties. If a
nominalizer is included, the second parameter comes into play and allows for
language variation with respect to the height of attachment of the nominalizer.
Specifically, a nominalizer can attach to (and thus
nominalize) distinct layers of syntactic structure (VP vs.
AspectP).