How Much Room for Discourse in Imperative? The Lens of Interface on English, Italian and Spanish*

0602 languages and literature 06 humanities and the arts
DOI: 10.1111/stul.12153 Publication Date: 2021-03-23T05:55:36Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractThis paper discusses root phenomena in imperative clauses, assuming as diagnostics conversational dynamics and the type of discourse categories that are admitted in their C‐domain, through a systematic comparative interface investigation in three languages (English, Italian and Spanish) based on an original experimental work. This novel perspective sheds new light on the syntax‐semantics mapping and the interface (syntax‐prosody) properties of imperative clauses, embedding the relevant proposal in a cartographic framework of analysis. Based on a twofold distinction of root phenomena – those which are widely allowed in Common Ground‐active (Type I) contexts and those which can occur in non‐Common Ground‐active contexts (Type II) – it is proposed that imperatives are non‐Common Ground‐active propositions with no update potential, thus allowing only Type II root phenomena. Syntactically, imperative clauses are dominated by a super‐ordinate Speech Act Phrase, including theSpeakerand theAddresseeas co‐arguments, which explains the blocking effects identified in imperatives.
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