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RAISING (LINGUISTICS)

(Redirected from Raising verb)
In linguistics, 'raising' is a form of argument control in which an argument that belongs semantically to a subordinate clause is realized syntactically as a constituent of a higher clause. For example, the sentence "Bill seemed to be angry" is a raising construction, because although ''Bill'' is understood semantically to be the subject of ''to be angry'', it is the syntactic subject of ''seemed''. The verb ''seem'' in this example is known as a 'raising verb'. Not all languages have raising verbs; English is one that does.
The term "raising" has its origins in the transformational analysis of such constructions. In this analysis, in the example above, the noun ''Bill'' is "raised" from its initial position as the subject of the embedded infinitival clause to its final position as the main clause subject.

Contents
Properties of raising
Types of raising elements
Raising vs. control
Notes
References
See also

Properties of raising


The main characteristic of raising constructions is the fact that the raised constituent is not a semantic argument of the upper clause. This can be illustrated in two ways, using the English raising verb ''seem''. First, the understood subject of the embedded infinitival clause can be an expletive:

★ ''It'' is snowing again. → ''It'' seems to be snowing again.

★ ''There'' are too many people here. → ''There'' seem to be too many people here.
These examples show that ''seem'' does not require a semantically potent subject. Second, the embedded clause can be put in the active or passive voice without significantly changing the meaning of the entire sentence:

★ (active) Bill is spearheading the revolt. ≈ (passive) The revolt is spearheaded by Bill.

★ (active) Bill seems to be spearheading the revolt. ≈ (passive) The revolt seems to be spearheaded by Bill.
These examples show that the semantic roles of ''Bill'' and ''the revolt'' are determined exclusively within the embedded clause. The verb ''seems'' does not assign an additional semantic role to its subject; otherwise, the meaning conveyed by the sentence would be expected to vary, depending on whether ''Bill'' or ''the revolt'' appeared as the main clause subject.

Types of raising elements


The English verb ''seem'' is a typical example of a "subject-raising" verb (also known as a "raising to subject verb" or "subject-to-subject raising verb"). These terms refer to the transformational analysis in which the subject of the lower clause is raised to become the subject of ''seem''. Other subject raising verbs in English include ''begin'', ''continue'', ''appear''.
English also has "object raising" verbs (or "raising to object verb", "subject-to-object raising verbs"), such as ''expect'' and ''believe''. In the sentence "Bill expected Annie to be late", ''Annie'' is the direct object of ''expected'', but it is interpreted as the subject of the embedded infinitive ''to be late''.
In addition to verbs, other syntactic categories can be raising elements. For example, the following examples contain a subject-to-subject-raising adjective:

★ Bill is ''certain'' to win. / It is ''certain'' to snow tomorrow.
In all of the cases mentioned above, the raised argument corresponds to the subject of the embedded infinitival clause. Raising from a lower object position is much rarer. In the so-called "''tough'' construction", the adjective has some properties of an object-to-subject raising element:

★ Bill is ''tough'' (for Carol) to convince.
In this example, ''Bill'' is interpreted as the missing object of ''convince'', but realized as the subject of the main clause. However, the other properties of this construction cannot be accounted for with a raising analysis.[1] Raising from object position has been proposed for the treatment of German passive constructions.[2]

Raising vs. control


The term ''raising verb'' is sometimes generalized somewhat to include control verbs, which are much the same, except with a noun argument being semantically an argument ''both'' of the control verb ''and'' of the verb argument. For example, in "He tried to do that," ''tried'' is a control verb, where its subject ''he'' is semantically the subject both of ''tried'' and of ''to do''. (Note that one cannot say,
★ "It tried that he did that," and that "That tried to be done by him" is syntactically well-formed but has a different, non-sensical meaning.)
As with many technical terms, both ''raising verb'' and ''control verb'' are used somewhat differently in different papers, partly because different linguistic theories may group verbs in somewhat different hierarchies.

Notes


1. Instead, the non-realization of the object is usually treated as the result of a kind of wh-movement. See, for example, Haegeman (1994), pp. 463–473, for a presentation of the GB analysis.
2. Fehlende Argumente: vom Passiv zu kohärenten Infinitiven, , Hubert, Haider, Linguistische Berichte, 1986

References



Introduction to Government and Binding Theory, , Liliane, Haegeman, Blackwell, 1994,

See also



Argument control

ECM verb

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