Understanding Merge: David Adger, Chapter 9
Understanding Merge: David Adger, Chapter 9
We have arrived at a picture of language where lots of things essentially look the
same. There seem to be three major locations of variation as far as syntax is con-
cerned:
• What elements are present (in the last two pages of the chapter, Adger shows
that instead of tense (T), there can be other crucial elements)? Also, some lan-
guages lack both pre- and postpositions, others adjectives, etc.
• What can be combined (Merged) with what (“The child seems sleeping” doesn’t
work in English; in other languages, it’s fine)
• What can or must be Internally Merged in a sentence, examples being the ques-
tion words that all languages have, such as who, what, etc. They must be moved
to the front in many languages; in others, the CANNOT.
But yet again: Basically, it’s the same process.
Apparently, Merge is a gift evolution gave us, maybe after it had given us others (con-
ceptual capacities such as imagining past, present & future) before.