Aarhus Universitets segl

Guest lecture: Manner adverbials in mind’s way

Monday, November 10, 2025, from 14:15 to 15:45, room 1481-324

Oplysninger om arrangementet

Tidspunkt

Mandag 10. november 2025,  kl. 14:15 - 15:45

Sted

1481-324

Arrangør

Institut for Kommunikation og Kultur

The Research Group in Syntax & Morphology (Research Programme in Language Sciences; School of Communication & Culture; Aarhus University) is pleased to announce the following guest lecture by Norbert Corver, Urecht University:

Manner adverbials in mind’s way     (Monday, November 10, at 14:15)

Manner is ubiquitous in human life. When we do things, we often do them in a particular way. This way of doing things is reflected in our language. You can drive slowly, think aloud, handle things with care, do things your way, and act as if you’re a fool. The research project Mind your Manner Adverbials! (MiMa) addresses the question of how ‘manner’ is encoded in the structure of human language (see also Hallonsten Halling 2018; Bogren Svensson 2023). In this talk, I will start by briefly summarizing the major aims of the MiMa-project. I will subsequently explore the inner structure and external behavior of a variety of manner-adverbial patterns in Dutch which, to my knowledge, have not been studied in any depth so far. Two of these patterns are given in (1):

  1. a.       Jan las de tekst hardop voor.                      (Dutch)

Jan read the tekst loud-up PRT

‘Jan read the text aloud.’

  1. b.       Jan sprak de zin op z’n Biden’s uit.

                Jan pronounced the sentence at his Biden’s PRT

                ‘Jan pronounced the sentence in a Biden-like way.’

In (1a), we have the adverbial pattern ‘A+P’, and in (1b), we have an adverbial pattern which superficially features two possessive elements: the weak possessive pronoun z’n and the possessive proper name Biden’s.

Reviving ideas in Katz & Postal (1964) and Emonds (1976), I will explore the hypothesis that superficially different manner-adverbial patterns are manifestations of one and the same abstract underlying representation (uniformity of structure), namely an adpositional structure. Furthermore, it will be proposed that some of these “adverbial” patterns are derived by displacement within the adpositional domain (e.g. (1a)) or displacement within the nominal domain (e.g., (1b)). I will extend my discussion to manner-adverbial patterns in languages other than Dutch, among which English and Welsh.

Bogren Svensson, Victor. 2023. Manner modifiers as syntactic heads. PhD dissertation. Lund: Centre for Languages and Literature, Lund University.https://portal.research.lu.se/en/publications/manner-modifiers-as-syntactic-heads/.

Emonds, Joseph. 1976. A Transformational Approach to English Syntax. New York: Academic Press.

Hallonsten Halling, Pernilla. 2018. Adverbs - A Typological Study of a Disputed Category. PhD dissertation. Stockholm: Department of Linguistics, Stockholm University.https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn%3Anbn%3Ase%3Asu%3Adiva-153421.

Katz, Jerrold J. & Paul M. Postal. 1964. An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Descriptions. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.