Locatives as small clauses
Özet
Locative phrases are assumed to denote the place where the event
denoted by the predicate of the sentence takes place. Recent studies,
however, have revealed that there is more to locatives than meets the eye.
One such example is Maienborn’s (2001, 2003) ternary classification of
locatives. She claims that there are three types of locative phrases each
in different phrase structural positions and anchoring different lexical
items of the sentence. These differing phrases thus lead to differing truth
values. However, in doing so Maeinborn misses an important point.
There is an extensive literature on the predicative uses of locative
phrases, like Hoekstra & Mulder (1990) and Muromatsu (1997). This
paper is an attempt to merge the main clause predicate proposal for
locatives with ternary classification thus reducing it to binary
classification. The underlying idea is that one of these types, Internal
Modifier, is actually the pre-/postpositional predicate of the small clause
embedded in the main clause. The paper concludes with a discussion on
the probable small clause analysis of some other pre-/postpositional
constructions.