ABSTRACT

In order to bring some minimal amount of order to the chaos that almost inevitably attends the use of the word ‘existential’ in a linguistic investigation, the author reserved the term existential sentence (ES) to designate all and only those English sentences in which there appears an occurrence of the unstressed, non-deictic, ‘existential’ there. Thus the term will be used as a characterisation of a class of syntactic objects, not as a semantic description. With ES sentences including formations such as ‘There were several people talking’ and ‘There ensued a riot’, perhaps nowhere else do we find so clearly displayed the complexity and subtlety of the syntactic and semantic interactions which determine the nature of human language.

part 1|140 pages

Do We Have to Have a There-Insertion Ruie?

chapter 1|35 pages

ES and the There-Insertion Analysis

chapter 2|14 pages

Emonds' Analysis

chapter 3|28 pages

The PS Hypothesis

chapter 4|26 pages

The Cleft Reduction Hypothesis

chapter 5|36 pages

The LOC-Front Proposal

part 2|105 pages

What Can Be Done About It?

chapter 7|12 pages

Verbal ES