Revisiting the Connection Between (Hyper)raising and Evidentiality
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Abstract
As long-distance A-dependencies such as hyperraising are discovered in more and more languages, syntactic theory must determine what makes hyperraising languages unique in being able to license A-movement out of finite clauses/CPs, and what sets these languages apart from languages like English which are traditionally understood to only license clause-bound A-movement. Currently, many analyses of hyperraising in the literature implicitly or explicitly assume that hyperraising is ruled out by default, but may be facilitated if a given CP is somehow ''defective'' or is ''deactivated'' as a barrier by some prior operation (Zyman 2024). In this paper, I paint a very different picture in which hyperraising is in principle allowed as long as it obeys the theta-criterion. I focus in particular on a documented connection between indirect perception predicates and hyperraising in Cantonese and Vietnamese (Lee and Yip 2024), which I argue is best captured in terms of the theta-criterion rather than the phase-deactivation analysis proposed in Lee and Yip (2024). After discussing my new analysis of the Cantonese/Vietnamese facts, I show that this analysis correctly predicts that hyperraising may be allowed even in English as long as the theta-criterion is obeyed.