{{short description|Property of a predicate taking no arguments}} In linguistics and grammar, '''avalency''' refers to the property of a predicate, often a verb, taking no arguments. Valency refers to how many and what kinds of arguments a predicate licenses—i.e. what arguments the predicate selects grammatically.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Oxford dictionary of English grammar|first1=Sylvia|last1=Chalker|last2=Aarts|first2=Bas|last3=Weiner|first3=E. S. C.|isbn=9780199658237|edition=Second|location=Oxford|oclc=862091421}}</ref> Avalent verbs are verbs which have no valency, meaning that they have no logical arguments, such as subject or object. Languages known as pro-drop or null-subject languages do not require clauses to have an overt subject when the subject is easily inferred, meaning that a verb can appear alone.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Barbosa|first=Pilar P.|date=2011|title=Pro‐drop and Theories of pro in the Minimalist Program Part 2: Pronoun Deletion Analyses of Null Subjects and Partial, Discourse and Semi pro‐drop|journal=Language and Linguistics Compass|volume=5|issue=8|pages=551–567|doi=10.1111/j.1749-818X.2011.00292.x}}</ref> However, non-null-subject languages such as English require a pronounced subject in order for a sentence to be grammatical. This means that the avalency of a verb is not readily apparent, because, despite the fact that avalent verbs lack arguments, the verb nevertheless has a subject. According to some, avalent verbs may have an inserted subject (often a pronoun such as ''it'' or ''there''), which is syntactically required, yet semantically meaningless, making no reference to anything that exists in the real world.<ref name=":1" /> An inserted subject is referred to as a pleonastic, or expletive ''it'' (also called a dummy pronoun)''.'' Because it is semantically meaningless, pleonastic ''it'' is not considered a true argument, meaning that a verb with this ''it'' as the subject is truly avalent. However, others believe that ''it'' represents a quasi-argument, having no real-world referent, but retaining certain syntactic abilities.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Lectures on Government and Binding|last=Chomsky|first=Noam|publisher=Foris, Dordrecht|year=1981|isbn=978-9070176280|location=The Netherlands|pages=323–325}}</ref> Still others consider ''it'' to be a true argument, meaning that it is referential, and not merely a syntactic placeholder.<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|journal=Journal of Linguistics|volume=9|issue=2|pages=261–270|language=en|jstor = 4175204|last1 = Bolinger|first1 = Dwight|title=Ambient it is meaningful too|year=1973|doi=10.1017/S0022226700003789|s2cid=145520169}}</ref> There is no general consensus on how ''it'' should be analyzed under such circumstances, but determining the status of ''it'' as a non-argument, a quasi-argument, or a true argument, will help linguists to understand what verbs, if any, are truly avalent. A common example of such verbs in many languages is the set of verbs describing weather. In providing examples for the avalent verbs below, this article must assume the analysis of pleonastic ''it'', but will delve into the other two analyses following the examples.
== Examples of avalent verbs == [[File:Syntax Tree. Pleonastic It.jpg|thumb|248x248px|'''Figure 1.''' Syntax phrase structure tree. This English sentence reads, "It rains." N.B. The angled brackets around "rain" indicate syntactic movement. The tree was creating using phpSyntaxTree.<ref name=":4">{{Cite web|url=http://ironcreek.net/phpsyntaxtree/|title=phpSyntaxTree - drawing syntax trees made easy|website=ironcreek.net|access-date=2018-12-16}}</ref>]]
=== Avalent verbs in non-null-subject languages === In non-null-subject languages (also referred to as languages which are not pro-drop languages) avalent verbs typically still have a subject. The subject, however, is not truly an actant (or, agent), but rather simply a marker of third person singular.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|title=Elements of structural syntax|last1=Tesnière|first1=Lucien|last2=Osborne|first2=Timothy John|last3=Kahane|first3=Sylvain|isbn=9789027269997|location=Amsterdam|oclc=904398341|date = 2015-02-11}}</ref> The following examples have been taken from Lucien Tesnière's ''Elements of Structural Syntax''.<ref name=":1" />
* Examples in English:
# ''It rains.'' (See Figure 1.) # ''It is snowing.''
* Examples in French:
# ''Il pleut.'' Meaning, "It rains," or "It is raining." # ''Il neige.'' Meaning, "It snows," or "It is snowing."
* Examples in German:
# ''Es regnet''. Meaning, "It rains," or "It is raining." # ''Es ist kalt''. Meaning, "It is cold."
In all of the above examples, the pronoun corresponding to English ''it'' (in French, ''il''; in German ''es'') does not point to a specific entity in the real world: it is neither a person, nor a "thing capable of participating in any way in the process of raining."<ref name=":1" /> (Although, as an interesting aside, Tesnière mentions that some believe avalent verbs began as monovalent verbs, where the subject referred to some divine being who was causing the weather.<ref name=":1" /> For example, in the Greek sentence, ''Ὅμηρος ὑπέλαβεν . . . ὗσαι τὸν Δία,'' meaning "Homer believed that Zeus was raining".<ref>{{Cite book|title=Lucian's a true story : an intermediate Greek reader|last=Samosata|first=Lucian|date=2011|publisher=Stephen Nimis|others=Hayes, Evan., Nimis, Stephen A.|isbn=978-0983222804|edition=1st|location=[Ohio?]|oclc=703218578}}</ref>) Tesnière states that the third person marker does not tell the listener/reader anything about the subject, because there is no concept of an actant (or agent) attached to it. Figure 1 shows a phrase structure tree of the English sentence ''It rains.'' While ''it'' does not appear to contribute any meaning to the sentence, it is still syntactically required to be present. For example, an English speaker cannot simply say, ''Rains'', because attempting to pronounce the sentence without the pleonastic ''it'' renders the sentence ungrammatical. This ungrammatical instance arises from a violation of the Extended Projection Principle (EPP) which states that all tensed phrases must have a subject.<ref name=":5">{{Cite book|title=Some Concepts and Consequences of the Theory of Government and Binding|last=Chomsky|first=Noam|location=Cambridge, Mass.|publisher=MIT Press|year=1982|isbn=978-0262530422|pages=[https://archive.org/details/someconceptscons0000chom/page/10 10]|url=https://archive.org/details/someconceptscons0000chom/page/10}}</ref> In Figure 1, ''it'' occupies the subject (or, specifier) position of the tense phrase (TP), satisfying the EPP, and making the sentence ''It rains'' grammatical.
=== Avalent verbs in null-subject languages === Avalency is more clearly demonstrated in pro-drop languages, which do not grammatically require a dummy pronoun as English does.
* Examples in Latin:
# ''Pluit''. Meaning, "It rains," or "It is raining."<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|last=Kienpointner|first=Manfred|date=2016-11-21|title=Weather verbs in Latin, German, and other languages. Contrastive and typological remarks|url=http://journals.openedition.org/pallas/3561|journal=Pallas. Revue d'Études Antiques|language=en|issue=102|pages=57–67|doi=10.4000/pallas.3561|issn=0031-0387|doi-access=free}}</ref> # ''Ningit.'' Meaning, "It snows," or "It is snowing."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.online-latin-dictionary.com/latin-english-dictionary.php?parola=ningit|title=Online Latin Dictionary – Latin – English|website=www.online-latin-dictionary.com|access-date=2018-12-13}}</ref>[[File:Syntax tree. latin pluit -meaning 'it rains' in english.jpg|thumb|'''Figure 2.''' Syntax phrase structure tree. This Latin sentence reads, "Pluit," which means "It rains" or "It is raining," in English. The angled brackets indicate syntactic movement. The tree was creating using phpSyntaxTree.<ref name=":4" />]]
* Examples in Italian:
# ''Piove.'' Meaning, "It rains," or "It is raining."<ref name=":2" /> # ''Nevica''. Meaning, "It snows," or "It is snowing."<ref name=":2" />
* Examples in Spanish:
# ''llueve.'' Meaning, "It rains," or "It is raining."<ref name=":2" /> # ''Nieva.'' Meaning, "It snows," or "It is snowing."<ref name=":2" />
Because none of the above examples have an overt, pronounced subject, they all appear to violate the EPP. However, null-subject languages allow phrases without an overt subject if the subject can easily be deduced by the context. Highly inflected languages, such as the above null-subject languages, may not need to insert expletive ''it'' the way that non-null-subject languages do (indeed, it would be agrammatical). The determiner phrase (DP) in Figure 2 is not overtly filled, hence it is marked with an ''e'' (empty) indicating that has no phonological content. This is allowed in null-subject languages because "overt agreement morphology licenses null subjects."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Svenonius|first=Peter|date=2002|title=Subjects, Expletives, and the EPP|url=http://web.mit.edu/norvin/www/24.956/SvenoniusEPP.pdf|pages=8}}</ref> This means that a morphologically rich language, such as Latin, uses inflections to indicate things such as, person and number (in the case of verbs), and so does not need to use a semantically void pronoun. For example, in the phrase in Figure 2, ''Pluit'', the ending ''-t'' indicates that the verb is third person singular, thereby making the addition of a pronoun unnecessary.
== Analyses of avalent verbs ==
Although in English these verbs do have what seems to be a subject, ''it'', it is arguably devoid of semantic meaning and merely a syntactic placeholder. For Tesnière, the ''it'' in the English sentence ''It rains'', is merely an instance of expletive ''it'' insertion. Differing views of this use of ''it'' do exist, however, making ''it'' potentially a quasi-argument or simply a normal subject. Determining whether or not ''it'' counts as an argument will help to explain what verbs, if any, are truly avalent.
=== Chomsky's "weather it" analysis === [[File:Syntax Tree. Weather It.jpg|thumb|340x340px|'''Figure 3.''' Syntax phrase structure tree using Chomsky's example sentence. This English sentence reads, "It sometimes rains after snowing." N.B. The angled brackets around green-coloured "it" and "rain" indicate syntactic movement. The tree was creating using phpSyntaxTree.<ref name=":4" />]] Noam Chomsky identifies two types of arguments, "true arguments" and "quasi-arguments".<ref name=":0" /> True arguments have the capacity to be referential, as in the example ''it is on the table''.<ref name=":0" /> Here, the pronoun ''it'' is referential, that is, ''it'' refers back to something that exists in the real world. Quasi-arguments, on the other hand, are not true arguments in the sense that they do not possess referential qualities, but do behave like arguments in the sense that they can control PRO. Chomsky claims that "weather ''it''" is a quasi-argument, as in the phrase ''It sometimes rains after [α snowing],'' where ''α'' represents PRO, which is controlled by weather ''it'' (see Figure 3).<ref name=":0" /> PRO typically takes on the "referential properties of its antecedent", but in this case the antecedent, weather ''it'', is not referential.<ref name=":0" /> Conversely, he also identifies "non-arguments" which are not meaningful semantically, but do provide a syntactic function.<ref name=":0" /> In the phrase ''it seems that John is here,'' ''it'' is what Chomsky refers to as "pleonastic it," which is neither referential, nor does it ever govern PRO.<ref name=":0" /> (N.B. In the above example, while "seems" requires the insertion of pleonastic ''it'', it cannot be truly be described as a verb of zero valence, because it takes the clause ''that John is here'' as its complement.) In English, if there is no meaningful subject, a pleonastic (such as ''it'') must be inserted into the subject position in order to satisfy the Extended Projection Principle (EPP) which states that a tensed clause requires a subject.<ref name=":5" /> For Chomsky, "weather ''it''" is neither a pleonastic, nor is it a true argument, it is a quasi-argument.
=== Bolinger's "ambient it" analysis === Dwight Bolinger posits that ''it'' is not simply a pleonastic, rather, it is a meaningful unit that is in fact referential. For Bolinger, the syntax trees in Figures 1, 2, and 3 would look the same structurally, but the difference would be that ''it'' is fully referential. ''It'' has as its referent the "environment that is central to the whole idea" of what is being discussed.<ref name=":3" /> He believes that ''it'' takes on the most general possible referent, and that its referent is usually unexpressed because it is meant to be obvious to the listener/hearer based on context. For example, with regards to expressions of weather, the ''it'' in the phrase ''It is hot,'' is "ambient" and refers to the general environment.<ref name=":3" /> The listener will correctly interpret ''it'' to be referring to the environment in which the speakers find themselves. In order to demonstrate that this general use of ''it'' is referential, he provides the following pair of questions and answers:
# ''How is it in your room? It's hard to study.''<ref name=":3" /> # ''How is it in your room? *To study is hard''<ref name=":3" />''.''
(N.B.The asterisk is a symbol meaning that the content following it is unattested/ungrammatical.) These examples demonstrate that, in this context, the occurrence of ''it'' in the first sentence is not simply an instance of extraposition (also called cleft construction), but refers back to the same ''it'' present in the question. The fact that the answer in the second set is unattested exemplifies the fact that the first is not a matter of extraposition. The phrase ''To study is hard'' is not ungrammatical in all contexts, but the fact that it is ungrammatical in this context shows that in order to answer the question ''How is it in your room?'' the person responding must make use of ''it'' in order for their answer to be grammatical. Therefore, according to Bolinger, ''it'' is neither a pleonastic, nor a quasi-argument, but a "nominal with the greatest possible generality of meaning," and says that it is incorrect to "confuse generality of meaning with lack of meaning."<ref name=":3" /> Under Bolinger's analysis of ''it'', verbs like the above examples are not avalent, but monovalent, taking the true argument ''it'' as their subject.
==References== {{Reflist}}
==External links== *{{wti|avalent}}
Category:Grammatical aspects