Research master thesis | Linguistics (research) (MA)
under embargo until 2026-07-31
2026-07-31T00:00:00Z
Adjectival modification in the nominal domain is one of the broadly discussed issues in the field. In the current thesis I build on the novel observation that apart from those cases where the...Show moreAdjectival modification in the nominal domain is one of the broadly discussed issues in the field. In the current thesis I build on the novel observation that apart from those cases where the adjectival modifier is adjacent to the noun, languages such as Dutch also allow to have an overt mediating element in between the noun and the modifier resulting in ‘een groene kleur auto’ (‘a green colour car’) (cf., Kayne 2005). I call this element a dimension classifier and argue that it heads DimensionP. I treat adjectival modifiers as phrases (cf., Cinque 2010) generated in the specifier of it. Based on the syntactic distribution of different classes of modifiers in similar constructions in Dutch and Russian and their interpretational properties I argue for three possible ways to merge the modifier in the structure. In two of these scenarios DimensionP is itself embedded in a complex structure leaving room for a functional preposition ‘of’ and creating possessive relation with the noun. Based on the feature specification of the dimension classifier I derive two possible interpretations out of this structure. The third scenario does not assume a possessive relation between the noun and the modifier and is achieved due to DimensionP only. I show that this model is able to capture the distributional properties of modification with and without an overt dimension classifier in attributive and predicative positions as well as in case of modifying an indefinite pronoun. I hold that every modifier should be introduced by a dimension classifier that can be realised as a free-standing, bound or zero morpheme. I show all three of these possibilities for both Dutch and Russian based on the discussion of modifiers of material, origin, colour, shape, size and subjective comment.Show less