Big much squib
I signed the e-mail "arnold, who much enjoyed the visit with beth et
al. last night" and then realized that this use of
much was of interest to me.
I've posted here on
determiner
much (vs. determiner
a lot of), and "much enjoyed" has a
different
much in it, a VP
adverbial of degree, but the various uses of
much have a lot in common,
including alternation with
a lot
(
of) and an affinity for
negative and interrogative contexts, so it was notable that what I
wrote had
much in a positive
declarative clause. In short order I racked up a list of puzzling
properties of the VP adverbial
much,
beginning with a contrast in acceptability between preverbal
positioning and postverbal positioning:
(1a) ok I much enjoyed
these concerts. (preverbal)
(1b) ?? I enjoyed these concerts much. (postverbal)
I'm inclined to asterisk (1b), but I'll settle for deep disapproval for
now. In any case:
Observation 1: The VP adverbial much is much less acceptable
postverbally than preverbally.
Since my initial interest in determiner
much had to do with its alternation
with
a lot of, I tried the VP
adverbial
a lot in the two
positions, and found it to work essentially opposite to
much: absolutely unacceptable
preverbally, fine postverbally:
(2a) * I a lot
enjoyed these concerts. (preverbal)
(2b) ok I enjoyed these concerts a lot. (postverbal)
Observation 2: The VP adverbial a lot
is acceptable postverbally, unacceptable preverbally.
This is not so surprising; it's well-known that different adverbials
have different privileges of occurrence in the several positions open
to them. Still, it's interesting that
much and
a lot look like they're parceling
out the two positions between them.
On to irrealis contexts, in particular negativity and
interrogativity. After my posting on determiner
much, John Lawler wrote me to claim
that determiner
much and
many were in fact negative polarity
items (NPIs) -- expressions that are restricted to certain contexts in
which the factuality of some situation is not assumed or asserted,
notably negative and interrogative contexts -- noting that they had
been on
his list of
NPIs since he started keeping it, "around 1971 or so". I
disputed Lawler's claim, pointing out that determiner
much and
many are virtually never
unacceptable in positive declarative clauses; instead, sometimes they
just seem infelicitously formal, and other times they are impeccable,
as in this example (one of several such) supplied to me by Marilyn
Martin:
My first full year at the Hawaii Film
Office has been filled with much joy and much pain. (
link)
(Meanwhile, Amanda Kraus wrote to report that determiner
much is very common in hip hop
culture, citing "the frequent (too numerous to list) calls of 'much
love' versus Led Zeppelin's 'whole lotta love'".)
In any case, my attention had now been drawn to irrealis contexts, so I
checked out the negative and interrogative counterparts of the
questionable (1b), and found them fine:
(3a) ok I didn't enjoy
these concerts much. (postverbal)
(3b) ok Did I enjoy these concerts much? No.
(postverbal)
I concluded that there is a small island of NPI-hood in the
much world, a place in which the
affinity of
much (in several
of its uses) for negative and interrogative contexts has hardened into
a restriction:
Observation 3: Postverbal VP adverbial much is a NPI. (And its
preverbal counterpart is not.)
(There are also a couple of idioms with
much in them
that are NPIs:
be much of a, as in "He's not much
of a linguist" and "Is he much of a linguist?" but *"He's much of a
linguist" 'He's an excellent linguist', and
be much to look at, as in "He's not
much to look at" and "Is he much to look at?" but *"He's much to look
at" 'He's attractive'.)
At this point things got weirder. In my earlier posting I'd
pointed out that the alternation between
much and
a lot of as determiners is
complicated by the fact that the modifiers that determiner
much can take --
so,
that,
very, etc. -- are not available for
a lot of (and that,
correspondingly,
quite can
modify
a lot of but not
much), so that when you want to
modify these quantity determiners, you'll be forced to choose just one
of them, with the result that in many contexts determiner
much improves in acceptability just
by being modified:
(4a) ? With
much shrubbery growing in front of it, the house seems dwarfed.
(4b) ok With that/so much shrubbery growing in front of it,
the house seems dwarfed.
All the uses of
much are
subject to modification in pretty much the same ways, and this includes
the VP adverbial
much.
Preverbally, this
much is
fine unmodified, as in (1a), so it's no surprise that it continues to
be fine when it's modified, but the postverbal version shows the
amelioration effect in (4):
(5a) ok I very/so much
enjoyed these concerts. (preverbal)
(5b) ok I enjoyed these concerts very/so much.
(postverbal)
That is, we
CAN get postverbal VP adverbial
much in positive declarative
clauses. It just has to be modified. Observation 3 has to
be refined:
Observation 3 (revised):
Unmodified postverbal VP adverbial much
is a NPI.
This is a very small island of NPI-hood indeed.
But wait! There's more. So far I've been talking about the
VP adverbial of
DEGREE much; the meaning of
much in the two examples of (5) is
roughly 'greatly, to a high degree'. But there's another VP
adverbial
much, namely a
FREQUENCY
adverbial with roughly the semantics and syntax of
many times. The frequency
adverbials
much and
many times are possible, though a
bit edgy, in postverbal position, but (like
a lot, and unlike
often) absolutely unacceptable
preverbally:
(6a) ? I come here
much/many times. (postverbal)
(6b) * I much/many times come here.
(preverbal)
(7a) ok I come here often. (postverbal)
(7b) ok I often come here. (preverbal)
We are forced to revise Observation 3 once again, to shrink the island
still further:
Observation 3 (second revision):
Unmodified postverbal degree VP adverbial much is a NPI.
Enough of postverbal
much for
today. On to preverbal
much,
as in (1a). If you do a Google web search on <"I much">, as
Thomas Grano did for me yesterday, you get an enormous number of hits,
nearly three million. Suspiciously many of them are "I much
prefer". Googling on <"I much prefer"> shows that about
HALF
of those original hits have the verb
prefer,
and that lots of the rest are junk of one sort or another. Grano
began to suspect that most verbs don't allow preverbal
much, and we were quickly able to
concoct near-minimal pairs like these:
(8a) ok I much appreciate
your advice. (APPRECIATE)
(8b) * I much believe your claims. (BELIEVE)
(9a) ? I much look forward to her
arrival. (LOOK FORWARD)
(9b) * I much expect her to arrive soon. (EXPECT)
Observation 4 (tentative): The default is for verbs to disallow
preverbal degree much.
At the moment, Grano and I have no idea about what properties of verbs
-- semantic, phonological, whatever -- might improve them as
hosts for preverbal
much.
It is known that there are verb-specific conditions on VP adverbials of
degree; Pullum and Huddleston (
CGEL,
p. 579) survey the situation warily:
There are significant differences among
degree adverbs. Some, such as almost,
nearly, quite, normally occur only in
[preverbal] position. Others, such as thoroughly, enormously, greatly, occur in either
[preverbal] or [postverbal] position. With this second set,
[postverbal] position is the default, and acceptability in [preverbal]
position depends on the verb. Thus He enormously admires them is fine,
but we cannot have *The price has
enormously gone up.
With
much, the situation seems to be:
Observation 5: Some verbs permit
preverbal much, and also
postverbal much if the much is modified, while others --
the default type, perhaps -- permit preverbal much ONLY IF IT
IS MODIFIED, and disallow postverbal much entirely.
For
appreciate (in (10)) vs.
believe (in (11)):
(10a) ok I much appreciate
your advice. (preverbal, unmodified)
(10b) ok I very much appreciate your advice.
(preverbal, modified)
(10c) * I appreciate your advice much.
(postverbal, unmodified)
(10d) ok I appreciate your advice very much.
(postverbal, modified)
(11a) * I much believe your claims.
(preverbal, unmodified)
(11b) ok I very much believe your claims. (preverbal,
modified)
(11c) * I believe your claims much.
(postverbal, unmodified)
(11d) * I believe your claims very much.
(postverbal, modified)
Perhaps there are more than these two types. Grano and I are just
getting into this stuff, which is vastly more complex than we'd thought
at first. And we haven't yet looked at how the classification of
verbs with respect to degree adverbial
much lines up with their
classification with respect to other degree adverbials. And we're
sure that there will be some variation here from speaker to speaker.
We also don't know if we're walking on a path that others have traveled
on. It usually turns out that Jespersen or Curme has been
there, or Bolinger, or McCawley, just to name the most likely suspects.
[And now, an unsolicited letter of thanks, as the end of my year at the
Stanford Humanities Center looms. First to Thomas Grano, who (as
an Undergraduate Fellow at the SHC) has worked with me all year on my
project on the advice literature on English grammar, usage, and style
in the 20th century; he's scoured this literature for treatments of
particular points, collected data (usually by Google searches) on
twelve different topics, and joined me in hours of discussion about
interpreting what he and I had found. It's been like having an
annex to my mind.
Thanks also to the SHC staff, for selecting him for a fellowship and
providing him with practical support of several kinds, including free
lunch whenever he wanted it, and to the office of the Vice Provost for
Undergraduate Education at Stanford, which funded that fellowship,
oversees the undergraduate honors programs (Grano has also just
completed an honors thesis, on pronoun case in coordination), funds the
Stanford Introductory Seminars (my advice-literature project grew out
of sophomore seminars I taught over the years in the SIS program), and
is now about to fund an undergraduate intern for me for this summer, to
continue my research on the choice of variant expressions, like
much vs.
a lot (
of). In two past summers, the
VPUE's office has funded interns for me on other pieces of my usage
project (on the reflexive
themself
and on dangling modifiers), as well as interns for the Stanford ALL
Project (on innovative uses of
all).
The VPUE's office is there to benefit students, but obviously it does a
lot for faculty too.
Finally, thanks to the sources of my own funding for this fabulous
year: the School of Humanities and Sciences at Stanford, the Department
of Linguistics at Stanford, and the Mericos Foundation, through a gift
to the SHC's endowment.]
zwicky at-sign csli period stanford period edu
Posted by Arnold Zwicky at May 17, 2006 06:29 PM