In generative grammar , a parasitic gap is a construction in which one gap appears to be dependent on another gap. Thus, the one gap can appear only by virtue of the appearance of the other gap, hence the former is said to be "parasitic" on the latter. For example, in the example sentence in (1) the first gap is represented by an underscore ( __ ), and appears as a result of movement of the constituent which explanation to the beginning of the sentence. The second gap is represented by an underscore with a subscript p ( __ p ); this is the "parasitic gap".
33-472: (Redirected from GAP ) [REDACTED] Look up gap in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Gap or The Gap may refer to various openings, vacant spaces, lacks or pauses: Natural features [ edit ] Gap (landform) , a low point or opening between hills or mountains or in a ridge or mountain range Treefall gap , a spacing between large trees in
66-633: A French football club Gap Inc. , a clothing store chain Global Animal Partnership , for animal welfare Government Accountability Project , for US whistleblower protection Great Ape Project , advocating legal rights for great apes Group of Personal Friends ( Grupo de Amigos Personales ), an armed guard of the Socialist Party of Chile 1970-1973 Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry , US Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico ,
99-457: A French football club Gap Inc. , a clothing store chain Global Animal Partnership , for animal welfare Government Accountability Project , for US whistleblower protection Great Ape Project , advocating legal rights for great apes Group of Personal Friends ( Grupo de Amigos Personales ), an armed guard of the Socialist Party of Chile 1970-1973 Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry , US Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico ,
132-590: A Mexican airport operator Gruppi di Azione Patriottica (Patriotic Action Groups), Italian WWII partisan group Gruppi di Azione Partigiana (Partisan Action Group), an Italian resistance group founded by Giangiacomo Feltrinelli Guyana Action Party Southeastern Anatolia Project ( Güneydoğu Anadolu Projesi ), a regional development project in Turkey The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company , ticker symbol GAP Science and technology [ edit ] Band gap or "energy gap",
165-522: A Mexican airport operator Gruppi di Azione Patriottica (Patriotic Action Groups), Italian WWII partisan group Gruppi di Azione Partigiana (Partisan Action Group), an Italian resistance group founded by Giangiacomo Feltrinelli Guyana Action Party Southeastern Anatolia Project ( Güneydoğu Anadolu Projesi ), a regional development project in Turkey The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company , ticker symbol GAP Science and technology [ edit ] Band gap or "energy gap",
198-403: A certain structural parallelism is present, where both the real gap and the parasitic gap bear the grammatical function of direct object. This parallelism is now explicitly illustrated using brackets. In each of these examples, the square brackets mark what appear to be parallel structures, similar to the type of coordinate structure found coordination . The brackets mark verb phrases (VPs), and
231-612: A forest Places [ edit ] Gap, Alberta , Canada Gap, Hautes-Alpes , France Gap, North Carolina , United States Gap, Pennsylvania , United States Garmisch-Partenkirchen , Germany, a license plate code GAP Great Allegheny Passage (GAP), a hiking/biking trail stretching from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Cumberland, Maryland Organizations and businesses [ edit ] Air Philippines , ICAO designator GAP G Adventures , formerly Gap Adventures, Canadian travel company Gap Analysis Program , on wildlife health Gap Broadcasting Group Gap FC ,
264-690: A ridge or mountain range Treefall gap , a spacing between large trees in a forest Places [ edit ] Gap, Alberta , Canada Gap, Hautes-Alpes , France Gap, North Carolina , United States Gap, Pennsylvania , United States Garmisch-Partenkirchen , Germany, a license plate code GAP Great Allegheny Passage (GAP), a hiking/biking trail stretching from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Cumberland, Maryland Organizations and businesses [ edit ] Air Philippines , ICAO designator GAP G Adventures , formerly Gap Adventures, Canadian travel company Gap Analysis Program , on wildlife health Gap Broadcasting Group Gap FC ,
297-562: A word or other form that does not exist in a language but could Gap, a kind of ellipsis, e.g.: Gap is an instance of gapping Parasitic gap , a kind of correlated ellipsis Mathematics and computer science and technology [ edit ] Air gap (networking) , a security measure GAP (computer algebra system) (Groups, Algorithms and Programming), a software package Generalized assignment problem Generic access profile , an interoperability protocol used in wireless telephony Gimp Animation Package, an extension for
330-562: A word or other form that does not exist in a language but could Gap, a kind of ellipsis, e.g.: Gap is an instance of gapping Parasitic gap , a kind of correlated ellipsis Mathematics and computer science and technology [ edit ] Air gap (networking) , a security measure GAP (computer algebra system) (Groups, Algorithms and Programming), a software package Generalized assignment problem Generic access profile , an interoperability protocol used in wireless telephony Gimp Animation Package, an extension for
363-496: Is a significant drop in acceptability of the parasitic gap. The examples in (13) show that, in such contexts, parasitic gaps are all marginal to varying degrees. The marginality of the examples in (13) correlates with the lack of syntactic parallelism. What exactly explains this drop in acceptability is not entirely clear, although it may have to do with ease of processing. Parallel structures are easier for humans to process, and hence parasitic gaps are facilitated by contexts that have
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#1732852095328396-466: Is challenged, however, by so-called missing-object constructions, also known as tough -constructions or tough -movement. The example sentences in (10) lack gaps entirely. The sentences in (11) contain parasitic gaps despite the fact that neither wh-movement nor topicalization has occurred. These sentences illustrate a missing-object construction, since the verbs appreciate , understand , and get are transitive and should hence take an object. This object
429-428: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages gap [REDACTED] Look up gap in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Gap or The Gap may refer to various openings, vacant spaces, lacks or pauses: Natural features [ edit ] Gap (landform) , a low point or opening between hills or mountains or in
462-606: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Parasitic gap While parasitic gaps are present in English and some related Germanic languages, e.g. Swedish (see Engdahl 1983), their appearance is much more restricted in other, closely related languages, e.g. German and the Romance languages. Japanese linguistic scholar Fumikazu Niinuma has attempted to differentiate between parasitic gaps and coordination in his research, as he believes
495-401: Is missing, as marked by the gap on the left. Whatever the analysis of parasitic gaps ends up being in the long run, it will have to accommodate the facts involving missing objects illustrated here. Movement (wh-movement, topicalization) may not actually be the key factor licensing parasitic gaps. Examining the examples of optional parasitic gaps produced above so far, one sees that in each case,
528-770: The "Glock Automatic Pistol" cartridge See also [ edit ] Gap theorem (disambiguation) Gaps (disambiguation) The Gap (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Gap . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gap&oldid=1258390712 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Spanish-language text Articles containing Italian-language text Articles containing Turkish-language text Short description
561-770: The "Glock Automatic Pistol" cartridge See also [ edit ] Gap theorem (disambiguation) Gaps (disambiguation) The Gap (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Gap . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gap&oldid=1258390712 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Spanish-language text Articles containing Italian-language text Articles containing Turkish-language text Short description
594-418: The "real" gap. The example sentences in (7) are normal declarative sentences that contain no gap at all. The sentences in (8), in contrast, contain two gaps, with the parasitic gap preceding the real gap. We know that the first gap (the leftmost gap) in (8) is parasitic on the following gap because it, i.e. the leftmost gap, appears inside what is normally an extraction island (marked with square brackets). As for
627-525: The 1960s, but remained undiscussed until papers by Knut Tarald Taraldsen and Elisabet Engdahl explored the properties of the phenomenon in detail. The analysis of parasitic gaps was central to the development of the GPSG framework ( Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar ) in the mid 1980s, and this analysis was later refined in the HPSG framework ( Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar ) of Carl Pollard and Ivan Sag . In
660-546: The 1990s, a debate centered around the best theoretical analysis of parasitic gaps, namely extraction versus percolation. This debate culminated in a collection of essays edited by Peter Culicover and Paul Postal in 2001. The theoretical analysis of parasitic gaps is not a settled matter by any means, since accounts of the phenomenon vary drastically. In very broad terms, there are two lines of analysis that one can pursue: Some analyses mix and match these two basic lines of analysis, although in general, both are well represented in
693-518: The GIMP Graph automorphism problem Other uses [ edit ] Gap (chart pattern) , areas where no trading occurs in the stock market Gap (Mandaeism) or Gaf, a demon of the Mandaean underworld GAP insurance , a type of vehicle insurance Gap Mangione , or Gaspare Charles "Gap" Mangione, jazz pianist and bandleader Gap year , a prolonged period between life stages .45 GAP ,
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#1732852095328726-414: The GIMP Graph automorphism problem Other uses [ edit ] Gap (chart pattern) , areas where no trading occurs in the stock market Gap (Mandaeism) or Gaf, a demon of the Mandaean underworld GAP insurance , a type of vehicle insurance Gap Mangione , or Gaspare Charles "Gap" Mangione, jazz pianist and bandleader Gap year , a prolonged period between life stages .45 GAP ,
759-469: The big picture, one can simply note that parasitic gaps behave variably depending upon whether they precede or follow the "real" gap. When they precede the "real" gap, their appearance is usually obligatory. Much work on parasitism assumes that parasitic gaps are dependent on the existence of another gap. The assumption is that parasitic gaps are reliant on the mechanisms that license normal extraction gaps such as wh-movement and topicalization. This assumption
792-501: The energy interval in which particles cannot propagate Gallium(III) phosphide , a semiconductor material Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate , a 3-carbon molecule metabolite important in both glycolysis and the Calvin cycle Good agricultural practice , any collection of value-based agricultural practices GTPase-activating proteins , a family of regulatory proteins Linguistics [ edit ] Gap, accidental gap , or lexical gap,
825-452: The energy interval in which particles cannot propagate Gallium(III) phosphide , a semiconductor material Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate , a 3-carbon molecule metabolite important in both glycolysis and the Calvin cycle Good agricultural practice , any collection of value-based agricultural practices GTPase-activating proteins , a family of regulatory proteins Linguistics [ edit ] Gap, accidental gap , or lexical gap,
858-465: The leftward extraction of clauses may be a general licensor for parasitic gaps while examining two theoretical approaches: On the basis of evidence from topicalization and object raising , Postal's 1994 paper concludes that true parasitic gaps are not licensed by rightward DP movement, but rather by leftward extraction of a clause. Overfelt 2016 argues against Postal's claim that rightward DP movement cannot license true parasitic gaps, and concludes that
891-407: The licensors of true parasitic gaps are adjunction structures . Some of the central research issues that arise in the investigation of parasitic gaps include: Many parasitic gaps appear optionally. They are in non-complementary distribution with a pronoun, meaning that the speaker has the choice whether to employ the gap or not. The example sentences in (5) contain typical parasitic gaps, whereas
924-420: The literature on parasitism and most accounts can be placed in the one or the other camp. The controversy regarding the licensing of parasitic gaps has also been widely debated as the phenomenon has continued to be researched. It is generally agreed upon that a real gap licenses a parasitic gap however, the required properties of this real gap have been widely debated. In 1994, Postal wrote a paper examining how
957-401: The ones in (6) use a pronoun instead of the gap. In other words, in these contexts, the parasitic gap is optional. Optionality like this suggests an analysis of parasitism in terms of ellipsis , since optionality is the primary trait of known ellipsis mechanisms. While many parasitic gaps occur optionally, other parasitic gaps occur obligatorily; this can be seen when the parasitic gap precedes
990-486: The second gap is parasitic on the first; the parasitic gap is marked with a p-subscript. The sentences in (4) show that if there is no real gap (that corresponds to the bold-faced constituent), then the parasitic gap is not possible. The appearance of parasitic gaps in (3) appears to be reliant on syntactic movement (e.g. wh-movement or topicalization ), and presents two challenges: The phenomenon of parasitic gaps appears to have been discovered by John Robert Ross in
1023-424: The sentences in (9) — which are strongly marginal (indicated by the double question mark notation ?? ) — they show that in a sense, the real gap can also be dependent on the parasitic gap. This aspect of parasitic gaps is related to weak crossover (WCO). WCO occurs when a fronted expression is coreferential with an intermediate expression that appears between the fronted expression and the position of its gap. In
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1056-420: The subordinator appearing between the brackets is functioning like a coordinator (i.e. and , or , or but ). This parallelism may be a significant factor that is aiding the appearance of the parasitic gaps. When the real gap and the parasitic gap are not structurally parallel — as when the real gap bears the grammatical function of subject, while the parasitic gap bears the grammatical function of object — there
1089-437: The two are often confused. An aspect of parasitic gaps that makes them particularly mysterious is the fact they usually appear inside islands to extraction . Although the study of parasitic gaps began in the late 1970s, no consensus has yet been reached about the best analysis. The example sentences in (2) are normal declarative sentences that contain no gap at all. The sentences in (3), in contrast, contain two gaps, whereby
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