What is it about?
Sluicing is a type of elliptical structure which applies to wh-questions, e.g. John met someone, but I don't know WHO. In this paper, I study sluicing in Tamil, a Southern Dravidian language. I claim that there are two types of sluicing in Tamil determined by whether the wh-word bears a case marker. The Tamil facts demonstrate clearly that the two types of sluicing stem from two types of wh-questions. The conclusion which I reach about Tamil sluicing leads to a further inquiry about the homogeneity of Dravidian syntax. I claim that an optimal theory of Dravidian syntax should stem from detailed analyses of individual Dravidian languages at a microscopic level.
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Why is it important?
At the descriptive level, our finding shows that while Tamil possesses three types of wh-questions, only two of which are used to form sluicing. From a broader perspective, our analysis casts doubt on any work which considers Dravidian syntax as a homogeneous linguistic entity.
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This page is a summary of: The syntax of two types of sluicing in Tamil, The Linguistic Review, January 2018, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1515/tlr-2017-0017.
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