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Rethinking Locative Inversion and Pseudo-locative Inversion: EPP Satisfaction as the Key to Polarity Focus and VP Ellipsis

Authors
배수영박명관
Issue Date
Jun-2025
Publisher
한국영어학회
Keywords
locative inversion; pseudo-locative inversion; extended projection pinciple; polarity; focus; VP ellipsis
Citation
영어학, v.25, pp 804 - 818
Pages
15
Indexed
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
영어학
Volume
25
Start Page
804
End Page
818
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/61654
DOI
10.15738/kjell.25..202506.804
ISSN
1598-1398
2586-7474
Abstract
This paper investigates a fundamental asymmetry between Locative Inversion (LI) and Pseudo-locative Inversion (PI) constructions in English: only PI constructions are compatible with VP ellipsis, despite their structural similarities. Previous accounts have struggled to explain why PI allows polarity focus and VP ellipsis, whereas LI does not. This study offers a novel explanation by demonstrating that the key distinction lies in how the Extended Projection Principle (EPP) is satisfied, which shapes both the syntactic structure and information structure of these constructions. Specifically, it argues that while PI constructions fulfill the EPP through the insertion of the expletive there in Spec-TP, allowing TP to function as a complete predicative domain and enabling polarity focus, LI constructions rely on Edge Feature (EF)-driven movement. In LI, the locative phrase temporarily occupies Spec-TP before moving to the left periphery, leaving the predicative domain incomplete and blocking polarity focus. Empirical evidence from various inversion constructions, including Negative Inversion, So-Inversion, and Comparative Inversion, supports this analysis by demonstrating that filling Spec-TP is essential for establishing a subject-predicate relation, enabling polarity focus, and licensing VP ellipsis. The findings contribute to the broader theoretical understanding of how syntactic derivations influence information structure, challenging discourse-driven explanations. This research underscores the syntactic basis of polarity focus licensing and offers a unified account of LI and PI constructions within the Minimalist framework.
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