Pronoun Doubling in the Dialects of Dutch |
Jeroen van Craenenbroeck and Marjo van Koppen |
Universiteit Leiden |
Abstract: We discuss doubling of the subject pronoun in the dialects of Dutch in three types of sentences: embedded clauses, inverted main clauses and subject-initial main clauses. In pronoun doubling constructions the second pronoun is always strong. The first prononoun can be either a clitic or a strong pronoun depending on the type of sentence it is in. In embedded clauses and in inverted main clauses the first pronoun has to be a clitic, in subject-initial main clauses the first pronoun can only be strong. Two questions arise from this distribution:
For the embedded clauses and the inverted main clauses we assume that doubled subject pronouns are generated as one DP. At PF the clitic moves out of the D0-head to adjoin to a host in C0. For the subject-initial main clauses this configuration is not available, because two strong pronouns cannot be generated as one DP. The answers we provide are:
|
Back to the programme |
Syntactic Atlas of the Dutch Dialects (SAND) |