Covert reciprocals: a scope-based analysis of reciprocal alternations
Author(s)
Wehbe, Jad
Download11050_2025_Article_9240.pdf (1.232Mb)
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This paper argues that the class of predicates that participate in reciprocal alternations, like the seemingly 1-place predicate hug in Jane and Mary hugged, should in fact be analyzed as 2-place predicates with a covert reciprocal in object position. The main challenge for this analysis is that there are truth-conditional differences between covert reciprocals and their overt counterparts. Focusing on a few case studies, this paper will argue that these seemingly lexical differences can be reanalyzed in terms of scope, allowing the differences to be systematically predicted once appropriate scope restrictions on covert reciprocals are established. More specifically, I propose that covert reciprocals are simply reciprocals that have to be bound at the lowest possible scope position. I show that these seemingly 1-place predicates behave just like overt reciprocals, modulo the low-scope requirement, for example giving rise to homogeneity and non-maximality. I therefore conclude that in order to account systematically for these inferences, covert reciprocals (at least the case studies that the paper considers) must be treated as having the same LFs as low-scope overt reciprocals.
Date issued
2025-09-30Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Linguistics and PhilosophyJournal
Natural Language Semantics
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Citation
Wehbe, J. Covert reciprocals: a scope-based analysis of reciprocal alternations. Nat Lang Semantics (2025).
Version: Final published version