prolegomena to a theory of x-markingweb.mit.edu/fintel/fintel-iatridou-2019-x-slides.pdf · if...
TRANSCRIPT
ProlegomenatoatheoryofX-marking
KaivonFintel andSabineIatridouMIT
1
Apair:
1a.IfMaryknowstheanswer,Johnknowstheanswerb.IfMaryknewtheanswer,Johnwouldknowtheanswer
Not“subjunctiveconditionals”:thesubjunctiveisneithernecessarynorsufficient.
Not“counterfactualconditionals”:FutureLessVividconditionals,alsocancellability asinAnderson1951.
2
O-marked
X-marked
“O-marking”:Open,Ordinary,..“X-marking”:eXtra
Thereisnodeepersignificanceinthechoiceofterms.
Theyarepickedmerelytoavoidwrongassociationslike“subjunctive”and“counterfactual”
3
WhatisthemeaningdifferencebetweenO- andX-marking?“semanticX-contribution”
WhatisthemorphologicaldifferencebetweenO- andX-marking?
4
TherearelanguagesthathaveveryspecializedX-morphology.
TherearelanguageswhereX-markingconsistsofmorphemesthathaveotherusesaswell.
5
• HungarianisalanguagewithspecializedX-morphology:Add-nA toanO-conditional
3. HaJános tudja aválaszt,Mari(is)tudja aválasztifJknowstheanswer-acc M(too)knowstheanswer-acc‘IfJohnknowstheanswer,Maryknowstheanswer’
4.HaJános tudná aválaszt,Mariistudná aválasztifJknow.NA theanswer-acc Maritooknow.NA theanswer-accIfJohnknewtheanswer,Marywouldknowtheanswer
(4)isPresentCounterfactual(PresCF):p,qdonotholdatUT.
6
PastCounterfactual,wherep,qdonotholdatatimepriortoUT: youaddpast+nA .
PresCF:5. HaJános tudná aválaszt,Mariistudná aválaszt
ifJknow.NA theanswer-accMaritooknow.NA theanswer-acc‘IfJohnknewtheanswer,Marywouldknowtheanswer’
PastCF:
6. HaJános tudta volna a választ,ifJ know.past.3sgbe-NA theanswer-acc
Mariis tudta volna aválasztM tooknow.past.3gbe-NA theanswer-acc‘IfJohnhadknowntheanswer,Marywouldhaveknowntheanswer too’
7
• FutureLessVivid(FLVs):
7a.haholnap el-indul, ajo:vo" h'etre oda-e’riftomorrowaway-leavethefollowingweek.onto there-reach‘Ifheleavestomorrow,hewillgettherenextweek’
b.haholnap el-indulna, ajo:vo" he'tre oda-e'rneiftomorrowaway-leave.NA thefollowingweek.onto there-reach.NA‘Ifhe lefttomorrow,hewouldgettherenextweek’
8
Next:
LanguageswhereX-markingplaysadifferentroleinotherenvironments.
SuchlanguagesvariablyusePastTense,Imperfective,FutureandsometimesSubjunctivetomarkthedifferencebetweenXandO-markedconditionals.
9
• ForexampleGreek,uses“FakePast”and“FakeImperfective”:
8.Anoarchigos pethene avrio,tha tonthavameekiIfthechiefdied.PST.IMP tomorrow,FUThimbury.PST.IMP there‘ifthechiefdiedtomorrow,wewouldburyhimthere’
Thehypotheticaleventsdescribedarenotinterpretedinthepastnorasbeinginprogress.
Yet,themorphologyisPastandImperfective.
10
English,amongmanyothers, isalsoafakepastlanguage(would=woll+PST):
9a.Ifhelefttomorrow,hewouldgettherenextweek(FLV)
b.IfIhadacarnow,Iwouldbehappy (PresCF)
c.Ifhehadbeendescended fromNapoleon, hewouldhavebeen shorter
(PastCF)
EnglishisinasmallminorityoflanguageswhereX-markingappearstoconsistonlyofPasttense.
11
TherehasbeenafairamountofliteratureontryingtoidentifyhowthedifferentmorphologicalingredientscontributetothemeaningofthedifferencebetweenXandOconditionals.
Thereareatleasttwowaysthisliteraturehasbeenonthewrongpath.
12
• ThefirstisthatmostproposalsconcentrateontheroleofPasttensealone.ignoringotherelementsinX-marking,likeImperfectiveAspectinGreek,Romanceetc).
ButifX-markingconsistsofPastandImperfectiveinGreek andjustPastinEnglish,onewouldhavetocometoeitheroneoftwoconclusions:
- [Past]Greek =/=[Past]EnglishAfterall[Past]Greek needsimperfectiveforX-marking;[Past]Englishdoesnot.or-[Past]Greek =[Past]EnglishAndtheobligatoryimperfectiveinGreekX-markingmakesnocontribution
13
Eitherconclusionhasgoneunder-appreciatedbyworkthatfocusesonlyontheroleofPastinX-marking.
Butwearenotheretodaytotrytorectifythistendency.Fortoday’spurposes,wedonotcarewhatXconsistsofmorphologically.
Thatis,Hungarian,EnglishandGreekareonapartoday.
14
ThesecondwayinwhichtheliteratureonX-markinghasbeenonthewrongpathisthatithasbeentryingtogleanthecontributionofX-markingbyjustlookingatconditionals.
Thatis,theprevalentpracticehasbeentotrytounderstandthecontributionofX- markingbylookingonly atthedifferencebetweenXandO-markedconditionals.
However,X-markingappearsinotherpartsofthegrammaraswell.
Defaultassumption:thecontributionofX-markingremainsthesame,regardlessofwhetheritappearsinconditionalsorelsewhere.
15
Sowhatwewouldliketodotodayistolookatthesenon-conditionalenvironmentsthatcontainXandseewhatwecanlearnfromthem…
…andfindoutifweneedtoamendourviewofX-markinginconditionals,inordertomaintainaconsistentinterpretationforXacrossallenvironmentswhereitappears.
Themethod:wewillstartwithameaningforXfromconditionalsandtakeittothenon-conditionalenvironmentsandseehowitfares.
16
Butfirst,wewillneedtoconvinceyouthatthereareindeednon-conditionalenvironmentsthatcontainX-marking.
Thereareatleasttwo:
-aphenomenonwewillcall“transparentwishes”or“X-markeddesires”
and
-aphenomenonwewillcall“transparentought”or“X-markednecessity”
17
Let’sstartwithwhatareoftencalled“Counterfactualwishes”:
10.IwishIhadabrotheràIdonothaveabrother
ThecomplementofWISHis(presupposedtobe)false/contrary-to-fact.
Buttheterm“counterfactualwish”isamisnomer:Thedesireisintheactualworld.Thiswillbeimportantlateron.
Wewillshortlydispensewiththeterm“counterfactualwish”.
18
19
Inmanylanguages,thereisamorphologicalcommonalitybetweenX-markedconditionalsandCFwishes(Iatridou 2000).
Inthefullversionofthegeneralization,themorphologyontheX-conditionalconsequentappearsontheembeddingverbwant andthemorphologyontheX-conditionalantecedentappearsonitscomplement:
11.X-markedconditional:ifpm1,qm2
12.CFwish:Iwantm2 thatpm1
WecallthistheConditional/Desire(C/D)generalization.
Theconditional/desiregeneralizationholdsinmanylanguages:
11.X-markedconditional:ifpm1,qm2
12.CFwish:Iwantm2 thatpm1
Notethatwearedealingwithtwo“types”ofX-marking:-Xontheconditionalconsequentanddesire-verb-Xontheconditionalantecedentandcomplementofthedesireverb
Themorphologicaldifferencebetweenantecedent andconsequentX-markingisnotalwaysvisiblebecauseinsomelanguages,“antecedent”and“consequent”X-markingarethesame(eg Hungarian,German).
20
Hungarian:
13.HaJános tudná aválaszt,Mariistudná aválasztifJknow.NA theanswer-accMaritooknow.NA theanswer-accIfJohnknewtheanswer,Marywouldknowtheanswer
14.Szeret-né-mhamagasabb len-nelike-NA-1sgiftallerbe-NE`Iwishshewastaller’
21
Inothers(eg Greek,Spanish)youcanseethedifference:
15.Sifuera más alto sería unjugadordebaloncesto.Ifbe.3.sg.PAST.SUBJ moretallbe.3.sg.COND aplayerofbasketball‘Ifs/hewastaller,s/hewouldbeabastketball player’
SpanishX-desire:
16.Querría que fuera más altodeloque es.Want.3.sg.COND thats/hebe.3.sg.PAST.SUBJ moretallthanits/heis‘Iwishs/hewastallerthans/heis
22
“Transparentwishes”:onepartoftheC/Dgeneralization:want+X-marking
Spanish,Greek,Frenchandothersare“transparentwish”languages.
Englishisnot.Ithasalexicalizeditemwish andobeysonlyonepartoftheC/Dgeneralization,namely“antecedent”X-markingonthecomplementofthedesireverb:
16a.IfIhad acar,Iwouldbehappy
b.IwishthatIhad acarnow
23
IfEnglishhadbeenatransparentwishlanguage,itwouldhavehadwouldonwant,and (18b)wouldhavemeant(18c),whichitdoesnot:
18a.IfIhadacar,Iwouldbehappyb.Iwould wantthatIhad acarnow(Iwould wanttohaveacarnow)
=/=c.IwishthatIhadacarnow
ButeventhoughEnglishisnotatransparentwishlanguage,itdoesobeyonepartoftheC/Dgeneralization,namelythesamemorphologyappearsontheconditionalantecedentandonthecomplementofthedesirepredicate.
24
IfEnglishhadbeenatransparentwishlanguage,itwouldhavehadwouldonwant,and (18b)wouldhavemeant(18c),whichitdoesnot:
18a.IfIhad acar,Iwouldbehappyb.Iwould wantthatIhad acarnow(Iwould wanttohaveacarnow)
=/=c.IwishthatIhad acarnow
ButeventhoughEnglishisnotatransparentwishlanguage,itdoesobeyonepartoftheC/Dgeneralization,namelythesamemorphologyappearsontheconditionalantecedentandonthecomplementofthedesirepredicate.
25
TurkishisanotherlanguagelikeEnglish,whichhasaspecializedmorphemefor“CF”wishes.LikeEnglish,itobeystheC/Dgeneralizationonlyinthecomplement.
X-markinginTurkish:TurkishhasfakePast.
X-markingontheconsequent:aorist+pastX-markingontheantecedent:SA+past (past-SAinepistemicconds.)
19.Johnönümüzdeki salı gel-se-ydi,annesi çokmutlu ol-ur-duJohn next Tue come-SA-PST his.mom veryhappybe(come)-AOR-PST‘IfJohnarrivednextTuesday,hismomwouldbeveryhappy’
26
Turkishhasundeclinable (non-verbal)keşke toconveyWISH:
20.Keşke önümüzdeki salı gel-se-ydiKeşke nexttuesday come-SA-PST‘IwishhewouldcomenextTuesday’
Andin(20)thespeakerbelievesthatherwishwillnotcometrue.(Hindikaash behavesthesame)
SotheC/Dgeneralizationisreal,eveniftherearelanguages,likeEnglishandTurkish,whichobeyonlyoneofitstwoparts.
27
Remember:“counterfactual”wishesaresocalled,notbecausethedesireisinacounterfactualworld(thedesireisintheactualworld)butbecausethecomplementistakentobefalse.
Thesameholdsfortransparentwishes/i.e.X-markeddesirepredicates.
TakeFrench.Thedifferencebetweenaninfinitiveorasubjunctivecomplementisafunctionofthe(contra)indexingofthesubjects:
21a.Jeveux aller à Paris.Iwantgo.inf toParis
b.Jeveux que tu ailles à Paris.Iwantthatyougo.subj toParis
28
Whentheembeddedeventisnotattainableanymore,plainwant isout:
22a.*Jeveux être arrivé mardi passé.IwantbearrivedTuesdaypassedintended:‘IwanttohavearrivedlastTuesday’
b.*Jeveux qu’il soit arrivé mardi passé.Iwantthathebe.subj arrivedTuesdaypassedintended:‘IwantyoutohavearrivedlastTuesday’
29
Instead,X-markingonwantmustbeused.French(consequent)X-markingiscalledthe“conditionel”,whichisnotamoodbutafuture+past+imperfective combination(Iatridou 2000).
23a.Jevoudrais être arrivé mardi passé.Iwant+X bearrivedTuesdaypassed‘IwishIhadarrivedlastTuesday’
b.Jevoudrais qu’il soit arrivé mardi passé.Iwant+X thathebe.subj arrivedTuesdaypassed‘IwishhehadarrivedlastTuesday’
30
SothefirstenvironmentwhereweseeX-markingappearoutsideconditionalsisX-markeddesiresforunattainablesituations.
31
ThesecondenvironmentisX-markednecessity.
TaketheEnglishmodalought,whichweidentifybythetestin(24a):
24a.Yououghttodothedishesbutyoudonothavetob.#Youmustdothedishesbutyoudonothaveto
Wewillrefertomodalsthatbehavelikeought inthistestas“weaknecessitymodals”.
Englishhasalexicalitemoughtbutotherlanguagesdonot.(vonFintel andIatridou 2008)
32
Otherlanguages:X-markingonastrongnecessitymodal.
InHungarianX-markingisjustnA.25.Péter-nek elkell-ene mosogat-ni-aaz edény-ek-et,
Peter-DATPRTmust-X wash-INF-3sgthedish-PL-ACC
de senki nem kényszer-ít rábutnoone notforce-3sg.SUBJ.3.OBJthat.SUBL
‘Peteroughttodothedishesbutnobodyrequireshimtodothat’
IntheabsenceofX-markingthesentenceisgrammaticalbutacontradiction.
33
Andwhenyoucantellthedifference,weseeitisspecifically“consequent”-X-marking. Spanish:
26a.Deberia limpiar losplatos,pero noestoy obligadoMust+COND cleanthedishesbutnotamobliged‘IoughttodothedishesbutIamnotobliged’
b.Tendria que limpiar losplatos,pero noestoy obligadoHave+COND COMPLcleanthedishesbutnotamobliged‘IoughttodothedishesbutIamnotobligedto’
c.#Tengo que limpiar losplatos pero noestoy obligadoHaveCOMPcleanthedishesbutnotamobliged
34
IfEnglishhadbeenatransparentoughtlanguage,itwouldhavehadwouldonhaveto,and (27b)wouldhavemeant(27c),whichitdoesnot:
27a.IfIhadacar,Iwouldbehappy
b.Youwould havetodothedishesbutyouarenotrequiredto=/=
c.Youought todothedishesbutyouarenotrequiredto
35
Sothewaythereisaconditional/desiregeneralization,morphologicallyspeaking,thereisalsoaconditional/necessitygeneralization,againmorphologicallyspeaking.(Andagain,therearelanguagesthatshowonlyonepartofeachgeneralization,inthiscaselanguageswherecomplementsofmodalsareinfinitivalandthusincapableofshowingX-marking)
Butit’sallaboutX-marking!Andontheassumptionthatthemodalofaconditionalissituatedintheconsequent,weunderstandwhat“consequent”-X-markingis:X-markingonamodal!-intheconditionalconsequent-onthedesirepredicate-onthenecessitymodal
36
HerewecanalreadydrawourfirstlessonaboutourtheoriesofX-markinginconditionals:
AnumberofproposalsaboutX-markinginconditionalsconsideronlyX-markingintheconsequenttobesemanticallyactive,andX-markingintheantecedentasortofagreementphenomenon(orSoT)totheX-markingintheconsequent.(ThoseproposalsmostlytalkaboutthePastinX).
ButsuchapproachesrunintoadifficultyinthefaceoftheC/Dgeneralization:antecedentX-markingisrequiredevenwhentheembedder isnotapast-markedelement,likeEnglishwish,theTurkishkeşke,Hindikaash,etc.
37
Asecondreasonwhy“antecedent”X-markingisnotjustagreement:Someoftheseparticles,likeTurkishkeşke,Greekmakari cantakeeitherO-markingorX-markingontheircomplement:28.Makari na ine eki tora O-marking
makari PRTistherenow(roughly):‘Iwanthim/hertobetherenow’
29.Makari na itan eki tora X-markingmakari PRTwastherenow‘Iwishs/hewastherenow’
ButwithX-markingitisnecessarilyconveyedthats/heisnottherenow.Soclearly“antecedentX-marking”isnotJUSTagreementorSoT.AntecedentX-markingmakesadifferenceinmeaning.
38
Sofarwehave:
X-markedconditionalsX-markeddesiresX-markednecessity
Wesawwhattheyhaveincommoninform.Nextweneedtoseewhattheyhaveincommoninmeaning.
WestartwithasimilaritythatX-markeddesiresandX-markednecessityshare:acertainambiguitywhichdoesnotappeartobepresentinX-markedconditionals.WewillstartbypresentingthissimilaritywithX-markeddesires.
39
X-markednecessityisambiguousbetween-Aweaknecessitymodalintheactualworld:
30.tha eprepe na pari aftin tinvarka
must+X takethistheboat‘heoughttotaketheboat’ß noteEnglishtranslation
-Astrongnecessitymodalina“counterfactual”world:
31.AnoFredithele na pai sto nisi,tha eprepe na pari aftin tinvarka
IftheFredwantedtogoto-theisland,must+X takethistheboat‘IfFredwantedtogototheisland,hewouldhavetousetheboat’ß noteEnglishtranslation
ThesetranslatedifferentlyintoEnglishbutin“transparent”languagestheybothareX-markingonanecessitymodal.
40
X-markeddesiresareequallyambiguous:
-Adesireintheactualworldtowardssomethingunattainable:
32.tha ithele na ixe makritero krevatiFUTwant+Past na hadlongerbed‘Hewishes hehadalongerbed’
-AdesireinaCFworld:
33.Anitan psiloteros tha ithele na ixe/exi makritero krevatiifwastallerFUTwant+Past na had/havelongerbed‘Ifhewastallerhewouldwanttohavealongerbed’
41
Again,notethedifferentEnglishtranslations
42
FromvonFintelandIatridou2008
Butnote:
Despitetheparallelsbetweentransparentought andwish,thereisonedifference:
• Necessity+X intheactualworld:aweakmodal(ought)Want+Xintheactualword:notaweakerdesire(butadesiretowardssomethingunattainable;hencethefrequentterm“CFwish”)
43
Sohereisourtask:understandwhatXdoesinthefollowingenvironments:
a. X-markedconditionalsb. X-markednecessitywhichyieldsaweaknecessityintheactualworldc. X-markednecessitywhichyieldsastrongnecessityinaCF-worldd. X-markeddesirewhichyieldsanunattainabledesireintheactualworlde. X-markeddesirewhichyieldsadesireinaCF-world
Wewillstartwithareductionthatshouldnotbecontroversial:(c)and(e)reduceto(a):
44
a. X-markedconditionalsb. X-markednecessitywhichyieldsaweaknecessityintheactualworldc. X-markednecessitywhichyieldsastrongnecessityinaCF-worldd. X-markeddesirewhichyieldsanunattainabledesireintheactualworlde. X-markeddesirewhichyieldsadesireinaCF-world
(c):strongnecessity inaX-marked consequent:if ...,Iwould have to...(d):adesireverbinaX-marked consequent:if ...,Iwould want to...
So(c,d)arecasesof(a).45
Sothequestionreducesto:WhatdoesXdointhefollowing?
a. X-markedconditionalsb. X-markednecessitywhichyieldsaweaknecessityintheactualworldd.X-markeddesirewhichyieldsanunattainabledesireintheactualworld
46
Atthispoint,wegetoursecondtake-homelessonaboutourtheoriesofX-markinginconditionals.
Schulzhascoinedtheterms“PastasModal”and“PastasPast”forthetwocampsofproposalsforwhat/howPastTense(partorwholeofX-marking)contributestotheinterpretationofX-markedconditionals.
47
PastasModal:
The“past”morphemehasanunderspecifiedmeaning:
temporalpast
μ
CFinference
Past-as-Modal:Iatridou,Schulz,Mackay,Bittner,andothers
times
worlds
PastasPast:X-markingisapastoperatorwithwidescopeovertheconditional,whichresultsinthe(mostlymetaphysicalmodal’s)modalbasebeingcalculatedinthepasttimeoftheutterancetime.
Past-as-Past:Ippolito,Arregui,Khoo,Romero,andothers
49
The“splittingpoint”
~p
~p
p
p
Roughly:thePasttakesusbacktoatimewherethe(non-Past)conditionalcouldstillhavebeentrue.
NobodythatweknowofhasattemptedaPast-as-PastaccountoftheX-markinginX-markeddesiresorX-markednecessity.
Back-shiftingthetimeofevaluationofthemodal,wouldnotyieldaweakmodalintheactualworld.
Thesameholdsfortransparentwish:Back-shiftingthetimeofevaluationofthemodal,wouldnotyieldtheconstellationofpropertiesofCFwishes.Afterall,whatwecallCFwishesareaboutcurrentdesiresintheactualworld.
50
SothePast- as-PastcampdoesnotfarewelloncewelookatX-markingoutsideconditionals.
WhataboutthePast-as-Modalcamp?
Mackay2015(seealsoLeahy2015)arguesthatcertainPast-as-Modalaccounts(morespecificallyIatridou2000andSchulz2014)sufferfromModusPonensproblems.TherehavebeenattemptstosavethePast-as-ModalapproachfromthisproblembySchulz,andinfact,byMackayhimself.
Wewillnotexpressanopiniononthisdebatetoday,butinsteadcontinueourdiscussionwitha“classic”accountofX-marking,theoneinStalnaker 1968,1975.
51
Tasks ahead
• Find common denominator for X-marking on modal operators (conditional modal would, weak necessity, desire predicates)
• Find analysis for "local" X-marking (inside conditional antecedent, complement of X-desires)
• Find compositional analysis for both [a millenium problem, afawct]
Back to Stalnaker
Stalnaker's strategy
“I am going to assume that we can identify at least paradigm cases of the contrasting categories of conditionals independently of any contentious theoretical assumptions about the grammatical marks by which we are identifying them, and then ask what work are those grammatical marks, whatever they are, doing? That is, what is the functional difference between a so-called subjunctive and a so-called indicative conditional?”
(Stalnaker 2014: pp.175f)
The meaning of X-marking
"I take it that the subjunctive mood in English and some other languages is a conventional device for indicating that presuppositions are being suspended."
Anderson casesIf she had taken arsenic, she would show exactly the symptoms that she is in fact showing.
“In this case, it is clear that the presupposition that is being suspended in the derived context is the presupposition that she is showing these particular symptoms—the ones she is in fact showing. The point of the claim is to say something like this: were we in a situation in which we did not know her symptoms, and then supposed that she took arsenic, we would be in a position to predict that she would show these symptoms.”
(Stalnaker 2014: p.185)
Modus tollens
There were no muddy footprints in the parlor, but if the gardener had done it, there would have been muddy footprints in the parlor, so the gardener must not have done it.
“Here, the subjunctive conditional cannot be counterfactual, in the sense defined, since one is arguing that the gardener did not do it, and one cannot presuppose something one is arguing for. That is, the argument is appropriate only in a context in which it is initially an open question whether the gardener did it.”
“In this case, the presupposition that is suspended is the proposition, made explicit in the first premise of the argument, that there are no muddy footprints in the parlor. The idea behind the conditional claim is something like this: suppose we didn’t know that there were muddy footprints in the parlor, and in that context supposed that the gardener did it. That would give us reason to predict muddy footprints, and so to conclude that if we don’t find them, he didn’t do it.”
(Stalnaker 2014: p.185)
Stalnaker (in a nutshell)
• O-marked conditionals: the selection function f is constrained to find a p-world within the context set (the set of worlds compatible with all the presuppositions made in the context of the current conversation).
• X-marked conditionals: f may reach outside the context set.
• That is, with X-marking, we abstract away from some established facts and then run a thought experiment. We then conclude that even in p-worlds outside the context set, where p is true, the consequent is true.
Stalnaker recast
• O-marking signals that the modal base is contained in the set of epistemically accessible worlds.
• X-marking signals that the modal base is not entirely contained in the set of epistemically accessible worlds.
But what about the other uses of X-marking?
• X-marked weak necessity: additional ordering source
• X-marked desires: widened domain to reach worlds where an actually unattainable desire can be satisfied
Common denominator?
Departure from a default modal parameter:
• X-marked conditional: domain wider than epistemic set
• X-marked weak necessity: enriched ordering source
• X-marked desire: domain wider than doxastic set
Local X-marking
• X-marking in conditional antecedents and in the complement of X-desires
• Idea: O-marking narrows the proposition to the relevant domain (epistemic, doxastic), X-marking signals that this narrowing would not work
Summary
X-marking appears crosslinguistically in
• X-conditionals
• X-desires
• X-necessity
Desiderata
• A unified analysis of the meaning of X should be given.
• Once a unified meaning has been identified, its morpho-syntactic-semantic composition needs to be given.
• No known account within the Past-as-Past or Past-as-Modal camps achieves this.
What's next
• Pretty much everything is left to do
• The common denominator of the meanings of X-marking remains elusive
• Multiple X-marking is a puzzle
• The compositional derivation is a puzzle