Preposition strandingPreposition stranding or p-stranding is the syntactic construction in which a so-called stranded, hanging or dangling preposition occurs somewhere other than immediately before its corresponding object; for example, at the end of a sentence. The term preposition stranding was coined in 1964, predated by stranded preposition in 1949.[1][2] Linguists had previously identified such a construction as a sentence-terminal preposition[3] or as a preposition at the end.[4] Preposition stranding is found in English and other Germanic languages,[5][6][7][8] as well as in Vata and Gbadi (languages in the Niger–Congo family), and certain dialects of French spoken in North America.[citation needed] P-stranding occurs in various syntactic contexts, including passive voice,[9] wh-movement,[10][11] and sluicing.[10][11] Wh-movement and P-strandingWh-movement—which involves wh-words like who, what, when, where, why and how—is a syntactic dependency between a sentence-initial wh-word and the gap that it is associated with. Wh-movement can lead to P-stranding if the object of the preposition is moved to sentence-initial position, and the preposition is left behind. P-stranding from wh-movement is observed in English and Scandinavian languages. The more common alternative is called pied piping, a rule that prohibits separating a preposition from its object, for instances in Serbo-Croatian and Arabic languages. English and Dutch use both rules, providing the option of two constructions in these situations. Preposition stranding allowed under wh-movementIn EnglishAn open interrogative often takes the form of a wh- question (beginning with a word like what or who). P-stranding in English allows the separation of the preposition from its object, while pied piping allows carrying the preposition along with the wh- object.[11] From the examples below, we can see the two options.
In DanishP-stranding in Danish is banned only if the wh-word is referring to nominative cases.[12] "Peter has spoken with <whom>", the wh-word <whom> is the accusative case. Therefore, p-stranding is allowed. In Dutch
Welk which bosi foresti liep walked hij he ___i ___i in? into? 'What forest did he walk into?'
Waar where praatten talked wij we over? about? 'What did we talk about?' In French
Qui who ce-que that t’as 2SG.have fait made le the gâteau cake pour? for 'Who did you make the cake for?' Preposition stranding disallowed under wh-movementIn GreekWh-movement in Greek states that the extracted PP must be in Spec-CP,[14] which means the PP (me) needs to move with the wh-word (Pjon). It can thus be seen that Greek allows pied piping in wh-movement but not prepositional stranding. In SpanishPied-piping is the only grammatical option in Spanish to construct oblique relative clauses.[15] Since pied-piping is the opposite of p-stranding, p-stranding in Spanish is not possible (* indicates ungrammaticality). In ArabicEmirati Arabic (EA)P-stranding in EA is possible only by using which-NPs that strand prepositions and follow them with IP-deletion. The preposition (fi) should be moved together with the wh-word (ʔaj) to make this sentence grammatical.[11] It should be: Libyan Arabic (LA)P-stranding in wh-movement sentences is normally banned in LA. However, a recent study found that a preposition seems to be stranded in a resumptive wh-question.[16] Sluicing and p-strandingSluicing is a specific type of ellipsis that involves wh-phrases. In sluicing, the wh-phrase is stranded while the sentential portion of the constituent question is deleted. It is important to note that the preposition is stranded inside the constituent questions before sluicing. Some languages allow prepositional stranding under sluicing, while other languages ban it.[10][11] The theory of preposition stranding generalization (PSG) suggests that if a language allows preposition stranding under wh-movement, that language will also allow preposition stranding under sluicing.[17] PSG is not obeyed universally; examples of the banning of p-stranding under sluicing are provided below. Preposition stranding under sluicingIn EnglishPrepositional stranding under sluicing is allowed in English because prepositional phrases are not islands in English.[18]
In DanishPeter Peter har has snakket talk.PP med with en one eller or anden, another men but jeg I ved know.PRES ikke not hvem who
'Peter was talking with someone, but I don't know who.' In SpanishJuan Juan ha has hablado talk.PP con with una a chica girl pero but no not sé know cuál which
'Juan talked with a girl, but I don't know which.' In ArabicEmirati ArabicJohn John ʃərab drank gahwa. coffee wijja with sˤadiq, friend bəs but maa not ʕərf 1.know ʔaj which sˤadiq friend
'John drank coffee with a friend, but I don't know which friend.' Libyan ArabicAli Ali tekəllem talked.3MS mʕa with waħed someone lakin but ma-ʕrafna-š NEG-knew.1P-NEG man who (hu) (PN.he)
'Ali talked with someone, but we didn't know who.' P-stranding in other situationsDirectional constructionsIn DutchA number of common Dutch adpositions can be used either prepositionally or postpositionally, with a slight change in possible meanings. For example, Dutch in can mean either in or into when used prepositionally, but only mean into when used postpositionally. When postpositions, such adpositions can be stranded:
[...] [...] dat that hij he zo'n such-a donker dark bos forest niet not in into durft dares te to lopen walk [...] [...] '[...] that he doesn't dare walk into such a dark forest [...]'
PseudopassivesIn EnglishPseudopassives (prepositional passives or passive constructions) are the result of the movement of the object of a preposition to fill an empty subject position for a passive verb. The phenomenon is comparable to regular passives, which are formed through the movement of the object of the verb to subject position. In prepositional passives, unlike in wh-movement, the object of the preposition is not a wh-word but rather a pronoun or noun phrase: In French
Relative clausesIn EnglishRelative clauses in English can exhibit preposition stranding with or without an explicit relative pronoun:
In FrenchTo standard French ears, all of those constructions sound quite alien and are thus considered barbarisms or anglicismes. However, not all dialects of French allow preposition stranding to the same extent. For instance, Ontario French restricts preposition stranding to relative clauses with certain prepositions. In most dialects, stranding is impossible with the prepositions à 'to' and de 'of'. A superficially-similar construction is possible in standard French in cases where the object is not moved but implied, such as Je suis pour 'I'm all for (it)' or Il faudra agir selon 'We'll have to act according to (the situation)'.
R-pronounsIn DutchDutch prepositions generally do not take the ordinary neuter pronouns (het, dat, wat, etc.) as objects. Instead, they become postpositional suffixes for the corresponding r-pronouns (er, daar, waar, etc.): hence, not *over het ('about it'), but erover (literally 'thereabout'). However, the r-pronouns can sometimes be moved to the left and thereby strand the postposition:[20] Wij We praatten talked er there niet not over. about. 'We didn't talk about it.' Split constructionIn GermanSome regional varieties of German show a similar phenomenon to some Dutch constructions with da(r)- and wo(r)- forms. That is called a split construction (Spaltkonstruktion). Standard German provides composite words for the particle and the bound preposition. The split occurs easily with a composite interrogative word (as shown in the English example) or with a composite demonstrative word (as shown in the Dutch example). For example, the demonstrative davon ('of that / of those / thereof'):
Ich I kann can mir me davon thereof nichts nothing leisten. afford. 'I can't afford any of those.'
Ich I kann can mir me da there-[clipped] nichts nothing von of leisten. afford. 'I can't afford any of those.' Again, although the stranded postposition has nearly the same surface distribution as a separable verbal prefix (herbekommen is a valid composite verb), it would not be possible to analyze these Dutch and German examples in terms of the reanalyzed verbs *overpraten and *vonkaufen, for the following reasons:
ControversyIn EnglishAlthough preposition stranding has been found in English since the earliest times,[21] it has often been the subject of controversy, and some usage advisors have attempted to form a prescriptive rule against it. In 1926, H. W. Fowler noted: "It is a cherished superstition that prepositions must, in spite of the incurable English instinct for putting them late [...] be kept true to their name & placed before the word they govern."[22] The earliest attested disparagement of preposition stranding in English is datable to the 17th-century grammarian Joshua Poole,[3] but it became popular after 1672, when the poet John Dryden objected to Ben Jonson's 1611 phrase "the bodies that those souls were frighted from". Dryden did not explain why he thought the sentence should be restructured to front the preposition.[23][24] In his earlier writing, Dryden himself had employed terminal prepositions but he systematically removed them in later editions of his work, explaining that when in doubt he would translate his English into Latin to test its elegance.[4] Latin has no construction comparable to preposition stranding. Usage writer Robert Lowth wrote in his 1762 textbook A Short Introduction to English Grammar that the construction was more suitable for informal than for formal English: "This is an Idiom which our language is strongly inclined to; it prevails in common conversation, and suits very well with the familiar style in writing; but the placing of the Preposition before the Relative is more graceful, as well as more perspicuous; and agrees much better with the solemn and elevated Style."[25] However Lowth used the construction himself, including a humorously self-referential example in this passage ("is strongly inclined to"), and his comments do not amount to a proscription. A stronger view was taken by Edward Gibbon, who not only disparaged sentence-terminal prepositions but, noting that prepositions and adverbs are often difficult to distinguish, also avoided phrasal verbs which put on, over or under at the end of the sentence, even when these are clearly adverbs.[4][b] By the 19th century, the tradition of English school teaching had come to deprecate the construction, and the proscription is still taught in some schools at the beginning of the 21st century.[26] However, there were also voices which took an opposite view. Fowler dedicated four columns of his Dictionary of Modern English Usage to a rebuttal of the prescription:
Criticizing the controversy over preposition stranding, American linguist Donald Ringe stated:[27]
Overzealous avoidance of stranded prepositions was sometimes ridiculed for leading to unnatural-sounding sentences, including the quip apocryphally attributed to Winston Churchill: This is the sort of tedious nonsense up with which I will not put.[28] Today, most sources consider it to be acceptable in standard formal English.[26][29][30] As O'Conner and Kellerman point out: "Great literature from Chaucer to Milton to Shakespeare to the King James version of the Bible was full of so called terminal prepositions."[29] Mignon Fogarty ("Grammar Girl") says, "nearly all grammarians agree that it's fine to end sentences with prepositions, at least in some cases."[31] Sources
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