TEHETSÉGTÁMOGATÁS A PÁZMÁNY PÉTER KATOLIKUS EGYETEM KILENC TUDOMÁNYÁGÁBAN TÁMOP-4.2.2/B-10/1-2010-0014 UTAZÁSI JELENTÉS KONFERENCIASZEREPLÉSHEZ Utazó(k): Tánczos Orsolya A konferencia neve, honlapja, rendező intézménye: Az utazás időpontja és időtartama: 14th Annual Conference of the English Department, University of Bucharest, English Department Az előadás témája: Dependent imperatives exist: Evidence from FinnoUgric Az előadás absztraktja: Pázmány Péter Katolikus Egyetem 1088 Budapest, Szentkirályi u. 28. www.ppke.hu www.ujszechenyiterv.gov.hu 2012. május 31-június 3. 4 nap Dependent imperatives exist: Evidence from Finno-Ugric Orsolya Tánczos (PPCU) & Diána Varga (PPCU) Keywords: embedded imperatives, illocutionary acts, language contact Introduction: It has been a recurrent claim in the literature that, universally, imperative mood cannot occur in dependent clauses (e.g. Sadock and Zwicky 1985, Platzack and Rosengren 1998, Han 1998), however other part of literature argues that embedded imperative sentences exist in some languages (e.g. Röngvaldson 2003, Platzack 2008, Rus 2005, Han and Lee 2002). Since the interpretation of ‘imperative mood’ involves a performative component, this view is closely related to the more general claim that performative acts cannot be embedded (e.g. Hooper and Thompson 1973). Background: One confounding factor is that in many languages the imperative and the subjunctive moods are difficult to distinguish syntactically and morphologically. Another difficulty lies in properly identifying which syntactic contexts truly qualify as dependent. Clauses cited as examples of dependent imperatives are often in fact root clauses syntactically, characterized by ‘root’ phenomena (for an overview of which, see Heycock 2006). These include nonrestrictive relative clauses, reason disjunct clauses, and various types of clauses complementing verbs of reporting (found in Old Scandinavian, Röngvaldson 2003; and in Korean, Portner 2007, Han and Lee 2007; but to a limited extent also in German Schwager and Poschmann 2008, and in English, Crnic and Trinh 2009). Aims and claims: In this paper we present novel empirical evidence from two Finno-Ugric languages, Hungarian and Udmurt, suggesting that imperatives can in principle occur in dependent clauses like in Slovenian (Rus 2005) or in Korean (Han and Lee 2002), and not only under the predicate ‘say‘ as in English (Crnič and Trinh 2009) or ‘sagen’ in German (Schwager and Poschmann 2008) but under assertives with a directive meaning (e.g.‘tell’), directive (‘order’), others (e.g. ‘want’, ‘convince’, for Hungarian see the details in Tóth 2006). According to the data we propose an analysis involving an illocutionary force in the embedded clause. Empirical facts: Both in Hungarian and Udmurt in imperatives the verb is inverted to the left of certain verbal modifiers like goal complements (1), while in both indicatives (2) and subjunctives (3) the verb appears to their right. A special negative marker is employed in imperatives, which is limited to imperatives in Udmurt, and is unavailable in indicatives in Hungarian (4). The verb bears a special inflection that is restricted to imperatives in Udmurt, and which is absent TEHETSÉGTÁMOGATÁS A PÁZMÁNY PÉTER KATOLIKUS EGYETEM KILENC TUDOMÁNYÁGÁBAN TÁMOP-4.2.2/B-10/1-2010-0014 from indicatives in Hungarian (1-2). The subordinating complementizer can be omitted in imperatives in Udmurt, while in Hungarian it can be omitted in imperatives and indicatives, but crucially, not in subjunctives (5). Syntactical analyses: Analyzing the empirical data from Hungarian and Udmurt – with the same syntactic behaviour in both types of clause (7), we assume a directive illocutionary force operator in the highest projection of the CP domain following Han (1998), in our analysis in ForceP (Rizzi 1997) both in the beginning of the matrix (6a) and the embedded clauses (6b). This operator is responsible for the special semantics and word order of the imperatives in Hungarian and in Udmurt moving the verb before the modifier or the negation and the operator also triggers the irrealis modality appearing as subjunctive mood in Hungarian and imperative verb-form in Udmurt in their surface positions. In the embedded clause this operator is selected by the predicate of the matrix clause. Conclusion: We close by suggesting that it is not accidental that Hungarian and Udmurt should share the property of permitting dependent imperatives: this may be a result of language contact between ancient Hungarian and ancient Permic (Redei 1964). Our empirical conclusion that imperatives can occur in dependent clauses supports the position that all illocutionary acts can be embedded (Krifka 2011). Beyond this we conclude by discussing the conditions of ‘that’ complementizer’s distribution in both languages. Várható-e az előadás megjelenése? Ki lesz a kiadvány szerkesztője és kiadója? Intézményi/pályázati támogatások összege, százaléka: Igen University of Bucharest 120 000 Ft 2012-06-05 ……………………………………… dátum Pázmány Péter Katolikus Egyetem 1088 Budapest, Szentkirályi u. 28. www.ppke.hu www.ujszechenyiterv.gov.hu Tánczos Orsolya ………………………………….. aláírás