This coming week, we have our next installment in the McGill Linguistics Colloquium series for the 2024-2025 academic year! The talk will be given by Dr. Karlos Arregi (University of Chicago) on Friday, November 22 at 3:30PM at Sherbrooke 680 in room 1041. The details of the talk are given below.

Title: The relation between head movement and periphrasis

Abstract: In joint work with Asia Pietraszko, I’ve been investigating the relation between head movement and the synthesis-periphrasis distinction in the verbal domain. We use the term “synthesis” to refer to verbal expressions in which the lexical verb bears all the verbal inflection in a clause (e.g. “rode” in English). In contrast, a periphrastic verbal expression additionally contains an auxiliary verb (specifically, “be” or “have”), and verbal inflection is distributed between the lexical verb and the auxiliary (e.g. “had ridden”).
   We argue for two crosslinguistic generalizations: AfTonomy and *V-Aux. According to AfTonomy, affixal Ts vary as to whether they are in a head movement relation with a verb. *V-Aux states that in periphrasis, the lexical verb and the auxiliary cannot be related by head movement. Existing analyses of periphrasis can account for one or the other generalization, but not for both. We further argue that this tension between the two generalizations is resolved if we adopt the hypothesis that both head movement and periphrasis are tied to selection. More specifically, we propose that head movement is parasitic on a selectional relation (following Svenonius 1994, Julien 2002, Matushansky 2006, and Preminger 2019) and that auxiliaries are merged as specifiers selected by functional heads such as T (Pietraszko 2017).

Karlos is interested in meeting with students and faculty. If you would like to meet with Karlos before the talk next Friday, please email Brandon with your availability by Wednesday so that we can schedule accordingly.