Similar parallels with comparable English constructions are
found with verbs such as arkhomai ‘begin’,
These constructions all seem quite parallel in form to their English counterparts and thus would presumably be represented syntactically as having PRO as subject of the infinitive, just as is the usual representation in GB theory for the parallel English sentences.[3] Thus (1) through (3) could be represented as in (4):
However, while verbs such as arkhomai,
Moreover, in later Hellenistic Greek, other verbs that had
been exclusively infinitival in New Testament Greek, especially
One important observation at this point is that Hellenistic Greek, as indeed all known stages of Greek have been, was a pro-Drop language, and thus allowed finite clauses without an overtly expressed subject; several of the main-clause verbs in the examples above show this aspect of Greek syntax clearly, for no overt subject, whether a noun or a pronoun, appears with the main verbs in (1), (2), (3), or (5b), for instance, and yet these sentences are well-formed. Thus Hellenistic Greek, in addition to the empty category PRO as the subject of infinitivals, would also, within a GB approach to syntax, have had a pro subject as well, representing the (potentially) empty subject of finite verbs. This observation raises the question of what the empty category is in the complement clause of the innovative infinitive-less sentences of the type found in (6b); in particular, is the subject of the finite complement verb a controlled empty category, that is, PRO occurring with a finite verb, or is it simply pro, the result of Subject pro-Drop in the complement clause? If the former, then some adjustment in the assumptions about PRO must be made, and if the latter, then some mechanism may be needed to assure like-subject interpretations. 3. PRO or pro in Greek Control Structures?Relevant to the question of whether finite complement structures
in control contexts, such as (6b) with
In the first conjunct, there is an overt subject
(humas) with the complement verb whereas in the second conjunct, there is
a finite second person plural subjunctive verb but no overt subject. Since that
subject would not be in a position to be controlled by a higher-clause nominal,
but also because there is no particular emphasis on the complement clause
subject, the most reasonable assumption concerning the missing subject with
That is, assuming that pro-Drop is at work in the
complement clause of (6b) means that one can generalize over (7) and (6b) and
posit pro-Drop as the cause of the absence of the subject of finite
complement clauses in general. The fact that
There may be additional evidence that pro-Drop is at work from a consideration of the differences between (6b), which shows that the subordinate clause subject in the innovative finite complementation can be empty, and seemingly parallel sentences in which a complement subject appears overtly. Caution is necessary here, for the best available apparent example of that sort[7], from the Epistles of Ignatius from the early 2nd century AD, as given in (8), may be subject to an alternative interpretation; thus the Greek and a word-by-word gloss is given first, and a translation and ultimate interpretation vis-à-vis control follow after some discussion:
The relevant issue in the interpretation of (8) is whether the hina-clause
is really an object complement to
Lake (op. cit., 229) translates this passage as
‘Only pray for me for strength, both inward and outward, that I may not
merely speak, but also have the will, that I may not only be called a Christian
(but may also be found to be one)’, apparently taking
To a certain extent, with regard to developing an argument that pro-Drop is involved in the absence of subjects of finite clauses, the exact interpretation of (8) and (9) may not matter. In either case, one could argue that such subordinate clauses without an overt subject cannot have a PRO subject. Assuming for the moment that Sophocles’ interpretation of the hina-clause in (8) is correct and that it is a complement rather than a purpose or result clause adjunct, then the argument for the operation of pro-Drop in the complement of finite control structures is that the conditions under which the controlled complement subject appears overtly in (8) are exactly those that are predicted in an account that invokes pro-Drop in the subordinate clause. In particular, the subordinate clause subject in (8) is supported by the emphasizing element kai, here meaning ‘also’; thus its appearance in (8) is exactly parallel to the appearance of the main clause subject in (6a), kai humeis thelete ..., which similarly was emphasized with kai. Such is to be expected if pro-Drop is responsible for absence of the lower clause subject, for emphatic subjects would not be suppressed by pro-Drop. The appearance of a subject in the finite complement when it is emphatic, as in (8), but not otherwise, as in (6b), therefore confirms the operation of pro-Drop in sentences with a finite complement verb.[10] Even if, on the other hand, the hina-clause in (8) is not a
complement in the usual sense but rather a purpose or result adjunct clause, the
argument about pro-Drop can still go through, under the assumption that a
missing subject in a purpose clause was at some stage of Greek to be represented
by PRO. Although finite purpose clauses were possible in Classical Greek and in
Hellenistic Greek, so too were infinitives of purpose; it is not clear if
hina In this account, therefore, not only is the need eliminated for
positing PRO in the innovative structures with finite complements, but also
crucial reference is made to the meaning of the complement to
The relevance of lexical semantics to an understanding of control
emerges also when one looks at the classes of predicates that in Hellenistic
Greek were most resistant to encroachment of the infinitive by a hina
clause. These include verbs and adjectives whose basic semantics would seem
to require like-subject control[11]
in that an unlike-subject complement with them is difficult to even conceive
of, such as arkhomai ‘begin’, dunamai ‘can,
be able, have the power to’ (and its later synonym, Further evidence of the importance of lexical semantics to control
comes from the situation with the verb ‘try’ in Hellenistic Greek
and later. In the Greek New Testament, the verbs for ‘try’,
mostly
Under the assumptions made above about the representation of control structures within GB theory, (10) would have PRO as the subject of the infinitive:
There is one example of
This sentence is translated by Lake (1975: 203) as ‘Do not attempt to make anything appear right for you by yourselves’. The significance of this example is discussed further below. The verb in Modern Greek that corresponds in meaning to
In particular, as illustrated in (13),
However, as (8) indicated for finite complements in Hellenistic Greek, a subject can be present in the complement clause imparting particular emphasis on the subject, as in (14), suggesting that the absence of the subject in (13) is a matter of pro-Drop and not a special type of control phenomenon from the syntactic standpoint:
Moreover, and this is where Modern Greek
‘try’ deviates from Hellenistic Greek ‘try’,
Thus, The upshot of this examination of ‘try’, as in the other cases discussed in this section, is that PRO can be dispensed with for finite complements in favor of an approach to control that emphasizes the role played by lexical semantics.[18] The argumentation for Hellenistic Greek is admittedly somewhat circumstantial, in that the sort of evidence one might look to in order to directly distinguish PRO from pro, as Varlokosta & Hornstein (1993) (among others) attempt to do for Modern Greek (see note 18), such as the possibility of split antecedents or sloppy as opposed to strict identity readings for anaphors under conditions of ellipsis, and the like, involves data not readily available for Hellenistic Greek. However, leaving aside the cases like (5) and (6b) since they represent the constructions whose analysis is at issue here, there is evidence available for Hellenistic Greek that does suggest that an effect analogous to control into a finite clause is possible. This evidence comes from the copy-raising construction argued for by Marlett (1976) and discussed also in Joseph (1978/1990, 1992), and involves control-like effects in what might be called “derived control” structures, where there is a “derived”, i.e. nonunderlying, relationship between a nominal in one clause and an anaphor in a lower clause. Thus, this construction involves “control” only in the broadest sense noted in the introduction. Still, the control-like effects in this construction show up via an overt pronominal in the complement clause, and the overtness of the pronominal means that positing an element like PRO is an unnecessary step for representing at least this type of control. An example is given in (16):
This construction can be said to involve control not only because there is a link between a (surface) nominal in a higher clause and one in a lower clause, but also because that link is a necessary one; that is, there are no sentences of the sort [know X [COMP NP V Y]], rather only ones in which there is a pronominal in the lower clause coreferent with the “X” of the main clause (the raised nominal). Even with examples such as (16) under the analysis Marlett argues for, though, there is no necessity for positing PRO. In the case of nonsubjects, as in (16a), an overt coreferent pronominal element is always present, for Greek does not have a process by which nonsubject definite pronominals can generally be suppressed. When lower clause subjects are the “target” of the derived control, as in (16b), just as is argued above regarding (6b) and similar sentences, it can again be the case that pro-Drop is at work. Relevant here is the fact that, as in (17), an overt subject pronoun can occur in the complement clause in this construction,[19] under conditions of emphasis, just as would be expected in a pro-Drop analysis:[20]
Thus in the one Hellenistic clear case of non-freely interpreted pronominals in a finite clause — that is, in control structures in the broadest sense — there is no need to invoke PRO. By extension, therefore, in cases like (6b), there would similarly be no reason to think of anything other than pro as the representation of the missing subject in the complement clause. Interpretation of pro as controlled by the main clause subject would be derivable from the lexical semantics of the main clause verb; a predicate meaning ‘try’ or ‘capable, or the like, would exert obligatory (like-subject) control, whereas a verb meaning ‘want’ would allow complement clauses with controlled subjects or with freely selected subjects. 4. Conclusion — Diachronic Syntax and ControlWhat all these historical developments with control in Hellenistic Greek point to, therefore, especially with regard to the innovative finite complement structures that emerge in later Hellenistic Greek and continue to spread at the expense of infinitival complements in Medieval Greek and on into Modern Greek, is that control is an inherently semantic notion, a phenomenon that is more a matter of lexical semantics than of syntax per se. By way of conclusion, since the potentially interesting aspects of control structures in Greek seem to be the developments noted here that were emerging towards the end of the Hellenistic period, continuing on into post-Hellenistic Greek, it is interesting to consider what this historical evidence may mean for the study of historical syntax and syntactic change, in the Greek context and even more generally. In studying the historical syntax of a language, researchers are often in the position of having to reconstruct what the starting point for a particular construction was or to make educated guesses in order to fill in gaps in the documentary record. However, those interested in tracing developments in the historical syntax of the Greek language are fortunate in having not only the rich attestation of Classical Greek from roughly the 8th through the 4th centuries BC[21] but also the abundant evidence of contemporary Modern Greek serving, respectively, as approximations to the beginning point and the endpoint against which one can judge whether changes have occurred. Moreover, there is the ample documentation of intermediate stages, including Hellenistic Greek and the considerable, but still relatively underexamined, material of Byzantine and Medieval Greek, covering roughly the 4th to the 17th centuries AD, that allow one to trace the steps by which the unfolding of syntactic developments took place. Comparisons that can be made across the history of Greek fall into several types. In one type of comparison, there is agreement between Classical and Modern Greek with regard to some structure, and moreover Hellenistic Greek shows the same structure. In such a case, therefore, there is continuity through these various stages of Greek. This situation is found, for instance, in some very general aspects of Greek morphosyntax, such as the consistent use across the centuries of the nominative case to mark surface subjects of finite verbs or the necessity for agreement between an adjective and a noun it modifies, as well as in lexically quite specific ones such as the occurrence of accusative case marking, and only accusative case, on the object of the preposition eis ‘to, into’ at all stages of Greek.[22] With regard to more fully syntactic phenomena, the pro-Drop phenomenon mentioned above for Hellenistic and Modern Greek can be cited here, for it is found in all stages of Greek,[23] and has thus shown stability throughout the history of the language. In a second type of comparison, Hellenistic Greek, which is a chronological way station between Classical Greek and Modern Greek, gives evidence of being a structural way station as well. That is, in such a case, evidence of a change between Classical and Modern Greek arrived at by a simple static comparison of relevant structures in these two stages of the language is confirmed by the appearance in Hellenistic Greek of transitional structures or of transitional stages, often with an innovative structure being seen for the first time in the Hellenistic period. An example is the loss of the dative case, for this case is robust in Ancient Greek, is absent altogether from Modern Greek, and is beginning in Hellenistic Greek to be encroached upon by prepositional phrases occurring where earlier Greek used a simple dative nominal. Similarly, as noted in section 2, with the replacement of the infinitive by finite verbal forms in complementation, a verbal category that was well-represented and much used in Ancient Greek, but totally absent from Modern Greek, can be seen in Hellenistic Greek to show signs of weakening, giving way to finite complementation; a sentence such as (7) above, where the older infinitival complementation and the innovative finite complementation are conjoined, governed by the same verb, is powerful evidence of Hellenistic Greek as a transitional stage in the retreat of the infinitive. These two patterns of comparison involving different stages of Greek are by far the most commonly instantiated, and represent the typical way in which stability is manifested and the typical way in which change emerges across the history of Greek. The case of control structures with ‘try’, however, is of particular interest for it turns out that certain aspects of their development seem not to fit into these usual patterns. From a methodological standpoint, such a case potentially would invalidate the use of Hellenistic Greek syntax as a checkpoint in the historical development of Greek syntax. As shown in the previous section, ‘try’ in Hellenistic
Greek, as represented by the verbs
However, the situation with ‘try’ in Classical Greek
raises a question concerning the source and the chronology of the apparent
innovation. In particular, even though ‘try’ in Classical Greek
could take an infinitive as complement, with an empty subject interpreted as
identical with the main-clause subject, there are examples in Classical Greek of
a finite complement with
As the translation, following Lattimore (1951), indicates
for (18b), the unlike-subject example seems to involve lexical semantics for the
main verb somewhat akin to the ‘facilitate’ reading given above for
unlike-subject There are several possible solutions to this problematic situation, however. First of all, it may simply be that all that is at issue here is an attestation problem, and that Hellenistic Greek actually did allow a Modern and Classical sort of finite complement structure with ‘try’ but there are simply no attested instances; attestation is, after all, a matter of chance, and thus there is no guarantee that a given feature has to be exemplified at all stages of any language one might examine.[24] Still, relying on such reasoning, however justifiable it may be, is itself somewhat problematic since it is not falsifiable. Moreover, it has the appearance of being a mere dodge, a convenience rather than a real explanation. Second, it could be the case that two different changes occurred,
one between Classical and Hellenistic Greek restricting the range of complement
types that Earlier stages of Greek, and the transitions between them, thus have much to offer to the debate concerning the nature of control, pointing towards the lexically-based accounts of Comrie (1985), Farkas (1988), Ladusaw & Dowty (1988), and Culicover & Jackendoff (2001), among others. At the same time, though, it must be admitted that much is indeterminate about the specifics of control in earlier stages of Greek and the changes that these constructions underwent, and will probably always remain so, given limitations inherent in historical syntactic investigations regarding access to crucial data and similar issues. Thus, besides the value of the account given here for the proper analysis of control, there are methodological lessons to be learned as well concerning the practice of historical syntax. Moreover, as far as the history of Greek itself is concerned, there is one methodological matter of paramount importance: the issue of stability with control and ‘try’ in all stages of Greek has an impact on how Hellenistic Greek is to be viewed, vis-à-vis the other stages of the language. But a resolution to even this issue depends on the availability of suitable data, the most crucial aspect, perhaps, to any linguistic investigation. 5. ReferencesArndt, William F. & F. Wilbur Gingrich. 1957. A Greek-English lexicon of the New Testament and other early Christian literature. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Blass, Friedrich & Albert Debrunner. 1961. A Greek grammar of the New Testament and other early Christian literature (translated and revised by Robert W. Funk). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Bouchard, Dénis. 1984. On the content of empty categories. Dordrecht: Foris. Chaski, Carole E. 1988. GB, GPSG and the separation of agreement and case. Papers from the 24th regional meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society: Parasession on agreement in grammatical theory, 28-40. Chomsky, Noam. 1981. Lectures on government and binding. Dordrecht: Foris. Comrie, Bernard. 1985 [1988]. Reflections on subject and object control. Journal of Semantics 4.48-65. Culicover, Peter W. & Ray Jackendoff. 2001. Control is not movement. Linguistic Inquiry 32.493-512. Culicover, Peter & Wendy Wilkins. 1986. Control, PRO, and the projection principle. Language 62.120-153. Farkas, Donka. 1988. On obligatory control. Linguistics and Philosophy 11.27-58. Foy, Karl. 1886. Ke palin to zitima ton aparemfatikon tipon [Once again the Question of Infinitival Forms]. Imerolojion tis anatolis politiografikon filolojikon ke epistimonikon tu etus 1887, 148-169. Hornstein, Norbert. 1999. Movement and control. Linguistic Inquiry 30.69-96. Jannaris, Antonius N. 1897. An historical Greek grammar. London: MacMillan and Co. (reprinted 1987, Georg Olms Verlag, Hildesheim). Joseph, Brian D. 1978/1990. Morphology and universals in syntactic change: Evidence from medieval and modern Greek. Harvard University Ph.D. Dissertation, printed and distributed by Indiana University Linguistics Club. [Updated and augmented version published (1990) in Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics series, New York: Garland Publishing Inc.] ———. 1983. The synchrony and diachrony of the Balkan infinitive: a study in areal, general, and historical linguistics. (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics, Supplementary Volume 1). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ———. 1992. Diachronic Perspectives on Control. Control and grammar, ed. by Richard K. Larson, Sabine Iatridou, Utpal Lahiri, and James Higginbotham, 195-234. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. ———. 1994. On weak subjects and pro-drop in Greek”. Themes in Greek linguistics (Papers from the First International Conference on Greek Linguistics, Reading, September 1993), ed. by Irene Philippaki-Warburton, Katerina Nicolaidis, and Maria Sifianou, 21-32. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. ———. 2000. Textual authenticity: Evidence from medieval Greek. Textual parameters in ancient languages, ed. by Susan Herring, Piet van Reenen, and Lene Schøler, 309-329. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Koster, Jan. 1984. On binding and control”. Linguistic Inquiry 15.417-457. Ladusaw, William & David Dowty. 1988. Toward a non-grammatical account of thematic roles. Thematic relations (Syntax and Semantics 21), ed. by Wendy Wilkins, 62-72. New York: Academic Press. Lake, Kirsopp. 1970; 1975. The Apostolic Fathers; with an English Translation (Loeb Classical Library, 28). Cambridge: Harvard University Press [Volume 1 (1975); Volume 2 (1970)]. Larson, Richard K., Sabine Iatridou, Utpal Lahiri, and James Higginbotham. Eds. 1992. Control and grammar. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. Lattimore, Richmond. 1951. The Iliad of Homer. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Marlett, Stephen. 1976. Copy raising in Koine Greek. M.A. Thesis, University of North Dakota. Migne, Jean-P. 1894. Patrologiae Cursus Completus. Series Graeca (Patrologiae Graecae, V). Paris: Garnier Bros. Miller, D. Gary. 1974. On the history of infinitive complementation in Latin and Greek”. Journal of Indo-European Studies 2.223-246. Perlmutter, David M. 1970. The two verbs begin. Readings in English transformational grammar, ed. by Roderick A. Jacobs and Peter S. Rosenbaum, 107-119. Waltham, MA: Ginn and Company. Philippaki-Warburton, Irene. 1995. On control in modern Greek”. Reading Working Papers in Linguistics 2, 143-158. Philippaki-Warburton, Irene & Catsimali, Georgia. 1990. ‘Accusativus cum infinitivo’ sta Arhea Elinika [‘Accusativus cum Infinitivo’ in Ancient Greek]. Studies in Greek Linguistics 10 (Proceedings of the 10th annual meeting of the Department of Linguistics, Faculty of Philosophy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki), 89-108. ———. 1996. Domes elenxu sta Nea Elinika [Control constructions in Modern Greek]. Studies in Greek Linguistics 16 (Proceedings of the 16th annual meeting of the Department of Linguistics, Faculty of Philosophy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki), 693-704. ———. 1997. Control in Ancient Greek. Greek linguistics 1995. Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Greek linguistics. Vol. II, ed. by G. Drachman, A. Malikouti-Drachman, J. Fykias and C. Klid, 577-588. Graz: W. Neubauer Verlag GmbH. ———. 1999. On control in modern Greek. Studies in Greek syntax, ed. by Artemis Alexiadou, Geoffrey Horrocks and Melita Stavrou, 153-168. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. Rizzi, Luigi. 1986. Null objects in Italian and the theory of pro. Linguistic Inquiry 17.501-557. Sophocles, E. A. 1914. Greek lexicon of the Roman and Byzantine periods. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Terzi, Arhonto. 1991. PRO and obviation in modern Greek subjunctives. Proceedings of the West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics 10.471-482. Terzi, Arhonto. 1992. PRO in finite clauses: a study of the inflectional heads of the Balkan languages. CUNY Graduate Center Ph.D. Dissertation. Varlokosta, Spyridoula & Norbert Hornstein. 1993. Control in modern Greek. Proceedings of the North East Linguistic Society 23, volume 2, ed. by Amy J. Schafer, 527-521. Amherst: GLSA, Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts. Author’s contact information: Brian Joseph Department of Linguistics [*]I would like to thank Pauline Welby for her assistance with some of the research that made this contribution possible. The comments of two anonymous reviewers have improved the paper considerably, especially on technical matters and references pertaining to GB theory. [1]Although I am treating Chomsky (1981) as more or less the “standard” view of control within GB theory, there are certainly other approaches that have been taken within that very framework; for instance, Bouchard (1984) attempts to reduce the distribution of PRO to Case Theory, a view taken as well by, e.g., Koster (1984), among others. More recently, Hornstein (1999), working from the perspective of the Minimalist Program, has argued that certain instances of control can be reduced to syntactic movement. Culicover & Jackendoff (2001) offer interesting counter-arguments to Hornstein’s proposal, and provide as well a good summary of the issues; note also the papers in Larson et al. (1992), where the range of viewpoints on control becomes especially evident. [2]All non-Modern forms and sentences for Greek are given in transliteration based on standard Greek orthography (though without accents), even though this orthography really reflects only Classical Greek pronunciation, not that in later stages of the language. Still, since the non-Modern forms are all known from written textual attestations, it seems best to present them in a rendering of their spelled form, even if it is not an adequate representation of the pronunciation at all stages after the 5th century BC. Modern Greek forms are given in a roughly phonemic transcription. [3]Such an analysis is explicitly argued for in Philippaki-Warburton & Catsimali (1997), where some adjustments in the conceptualization of PRO for a language like Greek (both Ancient and Modern) are proposed as well. [4]See Joseph (1978/1990) and (1983) for discussion of and references on this infinitive-replacement process. [5]While a
subjunctive verb, i.e. [6]AI complementation may involve Subject-to-Object Raising, at least in some cases, though other plausible analyses have been offered. Miller (1974), for instance, argues that it has accusative simply as part of the marking of a complement subject (since, for instance, verbs that take genitive objects, such as deomai ‘beg’ can take AI complementation), and Chaski (1988) posits an abstract complementizer (analogous to for in English but phonologically empty) that governs the appearance of accusative case. See also Philippaki-Warburton & Catsimali (1990, 1997) for a reconsideration of AI complementation in Ancient Greek. Nothing in this paper hinges crucially on the analysis of this type of complementation, though I am inclined to see it as involving Raising at least for some verbs. An argument for Raising from the diachronic development of this type is given in Joseph (1992), based on the fact that there is an apparent noninfinitival continuation of AI that has an accusative and a full finite complement clause, though the analysis of that type in Modern Greek is admittedly controversial (see Joseph 1978/1990: 252ff., notes G,H,L,N and the Appendix, for references and discussion). [7]Though see (9) and footnote 9 for other possible examples. [8]I say
“would be” since Sophocles does not translate this example; rather
Sophocles cites it as an instance where
[9]Interestingly,
Foy cites this example with
Given that there are several possible Hellenistic examples of
like-subject complements with [10] The fact that a case-marked (here, nominative) pronoun occurs in the subordinate clause of (8) offers additional support for the claim that what is involved in finite control situations is pro and not PRO in frameworks in which PRO is banned from case-marked positions (e.g. as in Bouchard 1984 or Varlokosta & Hornstein 1993, the latter specifically on Modern Greek) while pro can only occur in such positions (as in Rizzi 1986). See Philippaki-Warburton (1995), and Philippaki-Warburton & Catsimali (1996, 1997, 1999) for discussion of various proposals concerning pro and PRO in Modern Greek finite complements (with some reference as well to infinitival structures in earlier stages of Greek), and the claim that finite control structures involve pro and not PRO. [11]It may well be that some of these verbs are actual Subject Raising verbs and not control verbs in the strict sense or admit both types of structures (as has been argued for begin in English, for instance, by Perlmutter 1970). The resistance of some of these predicates to the innovative use of the infinitive is noted by Jannaris (1897: §090ff.). [12]This verb also means ‘try’ in the sense of to test or tempt someone. [13]This is
leaving aside for the moment one example, discussed in more detail below, in
which [14]This verb continues in Modern Greek with the primary meaning of ‘tease, annoy’, though the related deverbal noun pirazmos does mean ‘temptation’. [15]In this way, ‘try’ is somewhat like the English verb hope, which with a like-complement-subject (e.g. I hope to win) has an inner-directed meaning but with an unlike-complement-subject (e.g. I hope for Robin to win) has a more outer-directed meaning. I am grateful to my colleague Bob Levine for bringing this to my attention and for other helpful discussion on this matter. Perlmutter (1970) draws attention also to verbs like threaten with different meanings as in There threatened to be a riot and They threatened to resign (and ambiguity in The students threatened to take over the building). [16]This is akin
to the approach taken by Terzi (1992), who distinguishes two representations for
Modern Greek [17] PRO would presumably still be needed for like-subject instances in Hellenistic Greek, such as in (10). [18]The prediction of Culicover & Wilkins (1986:121, fn.2) is worth keeping in mind here, that in a language without an infinitive, “‘control’ would be accomplished differently” from the device of PRO that has been developed for an infinitival language like English. Still, it has been argued by Varlokosta & Hornstein (1993) (so also Terzi 1991, 1992) that languages like Modern Greek have PRO in (at least some) finite complement clauses (those whose main verbs require obligatory like-subject complements) in addition to pro in others. Philippaki-Warburton & Catsimali (1999) offer an important critical review of various arguments given in support of PRO in finite complementation in Modern Greek. [19] And, as noted above in footnote 10 with regard to (8), the overtly case-marked (nominative) subordinate clause subject in (17) speaks in favor of the pro analysis and against the PRO analysis. [20]The emphasis is evident in some available translations; the Gideons International translation, for instance, has “Then they knew that it was he who sat ...”. [21]Thus for the purposes of this discussion here, “Classical” can be taken to include Homeric Greek, despite the fact that Homer’s language is in many respects significantly more archaic than Classical Attic Greek. [22]This includes, of course, later morphologically natural or phonologically regular developments from eis, such as Medieval Greek eisé (phonetically [isé]) or Modern Greek s(e); the specialized, and presumably elliptical, use of Modern Greek s(e) with the genitive of a personal name to mean ‘at someone’s house’ (e.g. s tu Jáni ‘at John’s (house)’, literally “at of-the of-John”) is excluded here. [23]One fairly recent construction found in Modern Greek, involving the preferred use of innovative third person weak nominative pronouns with the presentational deictic predicate ná ‘here is/are!’ and their obligatory use with the locative interrogative predicate pún ‘where is/are?’, challenges the characterization of the modern language as an “ordinary” pro-Drop language; see Joseph (1994) for some discussion. [24]Of course, problems associated with the vagaries of attestation are not just an issue for historical linguistics; they arise as well in the study of language acquisition, among other areas of inquiry. [25]Admittedly, as
noted above, there are some semantic generalizations to be made as to which
verbs hold out the longest with infinitival complements, there are cases of
synonymous verbs that behave differently with regard to finite versus nonfinite
complementation. For instance, [26]Although the retreat of the infinitive, giving way to finite complementation, shows a steady overall movement in the direction of the finite forms, if charted on a century-by-century basis (see Joseph 1978/1990: Chapter 2, 1983: Chapter 3, for some relevant discussion), there were occasional instances of the “rejuvenation” of the infinitive. Such is the case, for example, from a functional standpoint, with the innovative Circumstantial Infinitive construction that arose and flourished in the 12th to 14th centuries in Medieval Greek (as discussed in Joseph 1978/1990, 1983, 1992, 1994, 2001, as well as Joseph 2000). | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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