The Absence of Islands in Akan: The Role of Resumption
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Islands and Resumption in A-Bar Dependencies
| (1) | a. | *King Kong is a movie which1 you’ll laugh yourself sick [CP if you see____1 ] |
| b. | King Kong is a movie which1 you’ll laugh yourself sick [CP if you see it1] |

| (3) | Gaps are island-sensitive in Irish (McCloskey 1979, p. 32) |
| *bean1 nachN bhfuil fhios agam [CP an bpósfadh duine ar bith____1 ] | |
| woman neg.comp I know int.prt would marry person any | |
| ‘a woman who I do not know if anyone would marry’ |
| (4) | Resumptives are not island-sensitive in Irish (McCloskey 1979, p. 33) |
| bean1 nachN bhfuil fhios agam [CP an bpósfadh duine ar bith í____1 ] | |
| woman neg.comp I know int.prt would marry person any her | |
| ‘a woman who I do not know if anyone would marry her’ |
| (5) | No WCO with resumptives in Irish (McCloskey 2011, p. 110) |
| a. *[DP fear1 [CP a d’fhág [a1 bhean]____1]] | |
| man aL left his wife | |
| ‘the man who their wife left’ | |
| b. [DP fear1 [CP a d’fhág [a1 bhean] é1 ]] | |
| man aN left his wife them | |
| ‘the man who their wife left him’ |
| (6) | Resumptives are island-sensitive in Vata (Koopman and Sportiche 1986, p. 370) |
| *Álɔ̍1 ǹ nyla̍ nynı̍ [CP nā ɔ̍1 dı̍ mέ ] la̍? | |
| who you wonder comp 3sg cut it wh | |
| ‘Who do you wonder whether he cut it?’ |
| (7) | WCO with resumptives in Vata (Koopman and Sportiche 1982, p. 143) |
| *Álɔ1 [ɔ̍1 nɔ̍] gùgù [CP nā ɔ̍1 mlì ] la̍? | |
| who his mother think comp 3sg left wh | |
| ‘Who did their mother think left?’ |
| (8) | Resumptives are not island-sensitive in Bulgariandeto-relatives (Krapova 2010, p. 1250) |
| Tova e [DP edin film1 [CP deto [DP vsicki [CP koito sa go1 / *____1 gledali ]] | |
| this is a film that all who.3pl are it.cl.acc seen mnogo go xaresvat]] | |
| a.lot it.cl.acc like.3pl | |
| ‘This is a film that all those who have seen it like it a lot.’ |
| (9) | No reconstruction to position of resumptive (Krapova 2010, pp. 147–1248) |
| [DP [snimkata na deteto si1]2 [CP deto vsjaka majka1 2 / *ja2 | |
| picture.the of child.the her.refl that every mother her.cl.acc | |
| nosi vs. portmoneto si ]] | |
| carry.3sg in purse.the her.refl | |
| ‘the picture of her1 child that every mother1 carries (it) in her purse’ |
| (10) | Resumption in Welsh is island-sensitive (Borsley et al. 2007, p. 148) |
| *Dyma ’r ffenest1 darais i [DP ’r bachgen [CP dorrodd hi1 ddoe ]] | |
| that.is the window hit.pst.1sg I the boy break.pst.3sg it yesterday | |
| ‘That is the window that I hit the boy who broke (it) yesterday.’ |
| (11) | Reconstruction to position of resumptive in Welsh (Rouveret 2008, p. 182) |
| Mae gan Siôn [farn ar ei1 lyfr]2 y mae pob awdur1 yn ei2 pharchu | |
| is with Siôn opinion about their book C is each author prog it respect | |
| ‘Siôn has an opinion about their book that each author respects.’ |
| (12) Types of resumption profiles (preliminary) | ||
| Is resumption island-sensitive? | Does resumption have properties of movement? | |
| Type I (e.g., Irish, Bulgarian) | ✗ | ✗ |
| Type II (e.g., Vata, Welsh?) | ✓ | ✓ |
| Type III? | ✓ | ✗ |
| Type IV? | ✗ | ✓ |
| (13) | Ā-dependencies in Scottish Gaelic are island-sensitive (Adger and Ramchand 2005, p. 178) |
| *am fear1 a phòg mi [DP a’bhean [CP a phòs pro1 ]] | |
| the man c.rel kissed I the.woman c.rel married | |
| ‘the man who I kissed the woman who married’ |
| (14) | No reconstruction for Principle C in Scottish Gaelic (Adger and Ramchand 2005, p. 171) |
| [Dè an dealbh de dh’Iain1]2 a cheannaich e1 pro2 an de | |
| what the picture of Iain c.rel bought he yesterday | |
| ‘Which picture of Iain did he buy yesterday?’ |
3. Resumption and Ā-dependencies in Akan


| (17) | a. | Yaw ma-a Saka siká. |
| Yaw give-pst Saka money | ||
| ‘Yaw gave Saka money.’ | ||
| b. | Hwáń1 na Yaw má-a {*_____1 / no1 } sika? | |
| Who foc Yaw give-pst 3sg money | ||
| ’Who did Yaw give money to?’ | ||
| c. | Déέn1 na Yaw má-a Saka { _____1 / *no1 }? | |
| what foc Yaw give-pst Saka 3sg | ||
| ‘What did Yaw give to Saka?’ |
| (18) | Inanimate resumption with clause-final adverb |
| a. Aduane nó1 na Kofí pέ (*no1) | |
| food def foc Kofi like 3sg | |
| ‘It’s the food that Kofi likes.’ | |
| b. Aduane nó1 na Kofí pέ *(no1) anɔpá | |
| food def foc Kofi like 3sg morning | |
| ‘It’s the food that Kofi likes in the morning.’ |
| (19) | Inanimate resumption with change-of-state verbs |
| a. Akonwa nó1 na Kofi kŕá-a (*no1) | |
| chair def foc Kofi import-pst 3sg | |
| ‘It’s the chair that Kofi imported.’ | |
| b. Akonwa nó1 na Kofi bú-u *(no1). | |
| chair def foc Kofi break-pst 3sg | |
| ‘It’s the chair that Kofi broke.’ |
| (20) | Inanimate resumption with secondary predication |
| a. Aduane nó1 na Kofí pέ [SC *(no1) hyehyééhyé ] | |
| food def foc Kofi like 3sg very.hot | |
| ‘It’s the food that Kofi likes very hot.’ | |
| b. [DP Aduane nó1 [CP áa Kofí pέ *(no1) hyehyééhyé nó ]] nie | |
| food def rel Kofi like 3sg very.hot cd this | |
| ‘This is the food that Kofi likes very hot.’ |

Some supporting evidence for this comes the observation in Korsah (2017) that subject resumptives, unlike object resumptives, undergo an optional alternation with the inanimate pronoun E-. This can be understood in terms of (optional) anti-agreement, which is already a well-known reflex of subject extraction (see e.g., Baier 2018; Henderson 2013; Ouhalla 1993; Schneider-Zioga 2007).
| (23) | Anti-agreement with local subject extraction (Korsah 2017, p. 118, 121) |
| a. Kofi1 na ɛ/ɔ1-káń-n kŕataá nó | |
| Kofi foc 3-/3sg.sbj-read-pst book def | |
| ‘It is Kofi who read the book.’ | |
| b. [DP Abɔfrá nó1 [CP aá ɛ/ɔ1-káń-n kŕataá nó ]] nie | |
| child def rel 3-/3sg.sbj-read-pst book def this | |
| ‘This is the child who read the book.’ |
3.1. Island Effects
| (24) | Island insensitivity with resumptives (Saah 1994, p. 172; Korsah 2017, p. 117) |
| a. Hwáń1 na wo-hú-u [DP onípá ko [CP áa ɔ-bɔ̍-ɔ no1 no ]] ? | |
| who foc 2sg-see-pst person def rel 3sg-hit-pst 3sg cd | |
| ‘Who did you see the person who hit him?’ (CNP island) | |
| b. Ám!má1 na Kofí bísá-a [CP sέ hwán na ɛ-dɔ̍ nó1 nó ] | |
| Amma foc Kofi ask-pst that who foc 3sg-love 3sg cd | |
| ‘It is Ama who Kofi asked who loves her.’ (wh-island) | |
| c. Ám!má1 na Yaw ré-sú [CP ésánesέ Kofi dɔ̍ nó1 nó ] | |
| Ama foc Yaw prog-cry because Kofi love 3sg cd | |
| ‘It is Ama that Yaw is crying because Kofi loves her.’.’ (adjunct island) | |
| d. Hwáń1 na [CP sέ Kofi dɔ̍ nó1 nó ] á-ma abusuá mmienú nó | |
| Who foc that K love 3sg cd perf-give family two def á-bóḿ. perf-reconcile | |
| ‘Who is such that [that Kofi loves her] has made the two families reconcile.’ | |
| (sentential subject) |
| (25) | Island insensitivity with gaps (Saah 1994, p. 172, 197) |
| a. Déέn na wo-níḿ [DP onipa ko [CP áa ɔ-tɔ̍-ɔ-έ ____ 1 nó ]] ? | |
| who foc 2sg-know person def rel 3sg-buy-pst-ye cd | |
| ‘What do you know the person that bought?’ (CNP island) | |
| ‘What do you know the person that bought?’ (CNP island) | |
| b. Deɛn1 na Mary bisa-a [CP sέ hwán na ɔ-yɛ-e ____1 nó ] ? | |
| what foc Mary ask-pst that who foc 3sg-make-pst cd | |
| ‘What did Mary ask who made?’ (Wh-island) | |
| c. Siká1 na Yaw ré-sú [CP ésánesέ Kofi dɔ̍ ____ 1 nó ] | |
| money foc Yaw prog-cry because Kofi love cd | |
| ‘It is money that Yaw is crying because Kofi loves.’ (Adjunct island) | |
| d. Déέn1 na [CP sέ Kofi dɔ̍ ____1 nó ] á-ma abusuá mmienú nó | |
| what foc that Kofi love cd perf-give family two def | |
| á-bóḿ | |
| perf-reconcile | |
| ‘What is such that [that Kofi loves (it)] has made the two families reconcile.’ | |
| (sentential subject) |
| (26) | Long-distance PP extraction is possible |
| [PP Akonwá nó mú ] na Ama níḿ [CP sɛ Kofí dá____PP ] | |
| chair def in foc Ama know that Kofi lie | |
| ‘Ama knows that Kofi lies in the chair.’ |
| (27) | PP extraction is island-sensitive |
| a. Amma nim [DP neá ńtí [CP áa Kofi dá [PP akonwá nó mú ] ]] Ama know thing because rel Kofi lie chair def in | |
| ‘Ama knows the reason why Kofi lies in the chair.’ | |
| b. *[PP Akonwá nó mú ] na Ama níḿ [DP neá ńtí [CP áa Kofi dá chair def in foc Ama know thing because rel Kofi lie ____PP ]] ‘Ama knows the reason why Kofi lies in the chair.’ (Complex NP island) | |
| c. Amma bisả-a [CP sέ bré bέn na Kofi dả [PP akonwá nó mú ]] | |
| Ama ask-pst that time q foc Kofi lie chair def in | |
| ‘Ama asked when Kofi lies in the chair.’ | |
| d. *[PP Akonwá nó mú] na A!ma bỉsả-a [CP sέ bré bέn na Kofi dả____PP ] | |
| chair def in foc Ama ask-pst that time q foc Kofi lie | |
| ‘Ama asked when Kofi lies in the chair.’ (wh-island) |
| (28) | Long-distance VP extraction is possible (Hein 2017, p. 9) |
| [VP dán sí-é ] na Ám!má ká-a [CP sέ Kofí á-yɔ̍ ____VP ] | |
| house build-nmlz foc Ama say-pst that Kofi perf-do | |
| ‘Ama said that Kofi built a house (not bought a car)’ |
| (29) | VP fronting is island-sensitive (Hein 2017, p. 10) |
| a. ?*[VP dán sí-é ] na mé-ń-té-e [DP atétésέm bíárá [CP sέ house build-nmlz foc 1sg-neg-hear-pst rumour.pl any that Kofí á-yÓ ____VP ]] Kofi prf-do ‘I did not hear any rumours that Kofi has built a house.’ (Complex NP island) | |
| b. ?*[VP dán sí-é ] na Ám!má bísá-a [CP sɛ dabέn na Kofí yɔ̍-ɔ-έ house build-nmlz foc Ama ask-pst that when foc Kofi do-pst-ye ____VP ] | |
| ‘Ama asked when Kofi built a house.’ (Wh-island) |
| (30) | Extracted PPs lack resumptives |
| a. Kofí da [PP akonwá nó mú ] | |
| Kofi lie chair def in | |
| ‘Kofi is lying in the chair.’ | |
| b. [PP Akonwá nó mú ] na Kofí dá { ____PP / *hɔ } anɔpá. | |
| chair def in foc Kofi lie there morning | |
| ‘Kofi lies in the chair in the morning.’ |
| (31) | Context: Kofi is about to graduate this year. Kwame claims that |
| A: Kofi bɛ-yɛ dɔkota afe yi | |
| Kofi fut-be doctor year this | |
| ‘Kofi will become a doctor this year.’ | |
| However, Ama knows that this is not correct and says | |
| B: Tíkyani na Kofi bɛ-yɛ {____1 / *no1 } afe yi | |
| teacher foc Kofi fut-be *3sg.obj year this | |
| ‘It’s a teacher that Kofi will become this year.’ (Hein and Georgi 2021) |
| (32) | Context: You are a new student at a school and tell a classmate that you are planning to rent a school uniform instead of buying one. However, you do not know if that is possible. Your classmate asks | ||
| A: Wo-be-bisa headmaster no? | |||
| 2sg-fut-ask headmaster def | |||
| ‘Will you ask the headmaster?’ | |||
| However, you did not want to bother the headmaster with this so you say | |||
| B: Daabi, ɔkyerɛkyerɛni1 na me-be-bisa {____1 / ??no1 } kane | |||
| no, teacher foc 1sg-fut-ask 3sg.obj first | |||
| ‘No, I will ask a (random) teacher first.’ (one of many teachers around) | (Hein and Georgi 2021) |
| (33) | a. Tíkya1 na m-á-té [DP atésέm nó [CP sέ Kofi bέ-yέ {____1 / |
| teacher foc 1sg-perf-hear rumour def that Kofi fut-be | |
| *nó1 } afe yí ]] | |
| *3sg.obj year this | |
| ‘It is a teacher that I heard the rumour that Kofi will become this year.’ | |
| b. Npípa na wo-té-e [DP atésέm nó [CP sέ Kofi súró {____1 / | |
| person foc 2sg.sbj-hear-pst rumour def that Kofi fear | |
| *nó1 / *wón1 } páa ]] | |
| 3sg.obj 3sg.pl really | |
| ‘It’s people that I have heard the rumour that Kofi really fears.’ | |
| (Hein and Georgi 2021) |
3.2. Cyclicity Effects

| (35) Morphological reflex of movement in Defaka (Bennett et al. 2012, pp. 296–297) |
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| (36) | a. Kofí wɔ έnyirési |
| Kofi be England | |
| ‘Kofi is in England.’ | |
| b. Kofí1 na ɔ1-wɔ̍ έnyirési | |
| Kofi foc 3sg.sbj-be England | |
| ‘It is Kofi who is in England.’ (Schachter and Fromkin 1968, p. 209) |
| (37) Overwriting affects all verbs in a long-distance dependency (Korsah and Murphy 2020) |
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| (38) Long distance relativization shows movement reflex |
| a. Me-nim [CP sέ óbíárá á-te [CP sέ Kofi á-ka [CP sέ 1sg-know that everybody perf-hear that Kofi perf-say that ɔ-dɔ ɔbáá nó ]]] 3sg.sbj-love woman def ‘I know that everybody has heard that Kofi has said that he loves the woman.’ |
| b. Me-hu-u [DP Obáá nó [CP Op1 áa óbíárá á-té [CP sɛ Kofi 1sg-see-pst woman def rel everybody hear-pst that Kofi ả-ká [CP sɛ ɔ-dɔ̍ nó1 nó ]]]] perf-say that 3sg.sbj-fut-love 3sg.obj cd I saw the woman whom everybody has heard that Kofi has said that he loves her.’ |
This supports the idea that whatever the source of this cyclicity effect is, it does not distinguish between dependencies into islands and non-islands. If it is the result of successive-cyclic movement via vP, as Korsah and Murphy (2020) argue, then we must conclude that such movement is possible out of an island (see Section 4.2.2 for further discussion). The other possible alternative, which we will ultimately dismiss, is that tonal overwriting does not diagnose movement after all. We will argue that there are several difficulties associated with maintaining this assumption, however (see Section 4.2.1).3.3. Reconstruction Effects
| (40) | No reconstruction to position of resumptive (Krapova 2010, pp. 1247–1248) |
| [DP [snimkata na deteto si2]1 [CP deto vsjaka majka2____1 / *ja1 picture.the of child.the her.refl that every mother her.cl.acc nosi vs. portmoneto si ]] | |
| carry.3sg in purse.the her.refl | |
| ‘the picture of her1 child that every mother1 carries (it) in her purse’ |
| (41) | Reconstruction to resumptive in Lebanese Arabic (Aoun and Benmamoun 1998, p. 581) |
| a. [Mʕalləmt-o1]2 fakkarto Ɂənno kəll walad1 ʕaṭee -ha2 hdiyye | |
| teacher.f-his thought.2sg that every boy gave.3s -her gift | |
| b. *[Mʕalləmt-o1]2 fakkarto Ɂənno ʕaṭee -ha2 kəll walad1 hdiyye | |
| teacher.f-his thought.2sg that gave.3s -her every boy gift | |
| ‘His teacher, you thought that every boy gave her a gift.’ |
| (42) | Reconstruction for variable binding in Akan |
| a. Abán bíárá1 dwéne [DP ne1-máńfóɔ̍ yíe-yɔ̍ hó ] dáá | |
| government every think poss-people well-be self every day | |
| ‘Every1 government thinks about the well-being of its1 people every day.’ | |
| b. [DP ne1-máńfóÓ yíe-yÓ hó ]2 na abán bíárá1 dwéné no2 | |
| poss-people well-be self foc government every think 3sg.obj | |
| dáá | |
| every day | |
| It’s the well-being of its1 people that every1 government thinks about every day.’ |
| (43) | Reconstruction across clause boundary |
| [DP Ne1-máńfóɔ̍ yíe-yɔ̍ hó ]2 na Kofí níḿ [CP sɛ abán bíárá1 dwéné | |
| poss-people well-be self foc Kofi know that government every think | |
| no 2 dáá ] | |
| 3sg.obj every day | |
| ‘It’s the well-being of its1 people that Kofi knows that every1 government thinks about | |
| every day.’ |
| (44) | Reconstruction for variable binding into an island |
| [DP Ne1-máńfóɔ̍ yíe-yɔ̍ hó ]2 na m-á-té [DP atésέḿ bí [CP sɛ | |
| 3sg.poss-people well-be self foc1sg-perf-hear rumour indef that | |
| abán bíárá1 dwéné no2 dáá ]] | |
| government every think 3sg.obj every day | |
| ‘It’s the well-being of its people that I have heard a rumour that every government thinks about everyday.’ | |
| thinks about everyday.’ |
| (45) | Reconstruction for Principle A with resumption |
| a. Kofí1 dwene [CP sέ Ám!máj bɛ-pírá [DP ne hój/*i ]] | |
| Kofi think that Ama fut-hurt 3sg.obj refl | |
| ‘Kofii think that Amaj will hurt herselfj/*i’ | |
| b. [DP Ne hój/*i ]1 na Kofíi dwéné [CP sɛ Ám!máj bɛ-pírá no1 Okyena ] | |
| possrefl foc Kofi think that Ama fut-hurt 3sg.obj tomorrow | |
| ‘It is herselfj that Kofi thinks that Amaj will hurt tomorrow.’ |
| (46) | Reconstruction for Principle C with resumption |
| a. *ɔ1-p [DP Kofí1 m̉fỏnỉrỉ yỉ] | |
| 3sg-like Kofi picture this | |
| ‘He1 likes the picture of Kofi1’ | |
| b. *[DP Kofí1 m̉fỏnỉrỉ yỉ ]2 na Ám!má níḿ [CP sɛ ɔ1-pέ no2 paa ] | |
| Kofi picture this foc Ama think that 3sg-like 3sg really | |
| ‘It’s this picture of Kofi1 that Ama thinks he1 really likes’ |
| (47) | a. Principle C reconstruction into complex NP island |
| [DP Ám!mái adúané nó ]1 na m-á-té [DP atetésέm bí [CP sέ | |
| Amma food def foc 1sg-perf-hear rumour indef that | |
| ɔ̍*i/j-dí no1 dáá ]] | |
| 3sg.nom-eat 3sg every day | |
| ‘It’s Ama’si food that I have heard a rumour that s/he*i/j eats every day. | |
| b. Principle C reconstruction into adjunct island | |
| [DP Ám!mái adúané nó ]1 na Yaw ré-sú [CP ésánesέ ɔ̍*i/j-dí no1 | |
| Amma food def foc Yaw prog-eat because 3sg.nom-eat 3sg | |
| dáá] | |
| every day | |
| ‘It’s Ama’si food that Yaw is crying because s/he*i/j eats every day.’ |
| (48) | Reconstruction for idiomatic interpretation |
| a. Kofí to-o ndwóm έnóra | |
| Kofi throw-pst song yesterday | |
| ‘Kofi sang yesterday’ | |
| b. Ndwóm1 na Kofí tó-o no1 έnóra | |
| song foc Kofi throw-pst 3sg.obj yesterday | |
| ‘It was singing that Kofi did yesterday.’ |
3.4. Crossover Effects
| (49) | Strong Crossover |
| a. Ẉho1 does he1 love ____1 ? | |
| b. Who1____ 1 loves him*(self)1? |
| (50) | Weak Crossover |
| a. *Who1 does [his1 mother] love ____ 1 ? | |
| b. Who1____ 1 loves [his1 mother] ? |
| (51) | Every boy1 told [his1 mother] that the teacher praised him1 |
| (52) | a. [DP fear [CP Op1 a d’fhág [a1 bhean] é1 ]] |
| man aN left his wife them | |
| ‘the man who their wife left him’ (Irish) | |
| b. *Àɔ̍1 [ɔ̍1 nɔ̍] gùgù [CP nā ɔ̍1 mlì ] la̍? | |
| who his mother think comp 3sg left wh | |
| ‘Who did their mother think left?’ (Vata) |
The presence of a WCO effect in (53b) was disputed by Titov (2019) and, indeed, it seems that this conclusion was too hasty. At present, we are no longer confident in our previous claim that (53b) reliably exhibits a WCO effect. The conclusion at this point would seem to be quite straightforward then—Akan lacks WCO effects, and therefore, resumption in Akan fails this potential diagnostic for movement, patterning with base-generated resumption languages like Irish.
This means that the absence of WCO effects could simply be due to the fact that there is an alternative derivation which avoids the crossover configuration entirely, providing an alternative way of satisfying the binding requirements of the non-resumptive pronoun. On this view, the absence of WCO effects would not necessarily provide an argument in favour of base generation over movement.
This then opens up the derivation possibility in (55) for apparent WCO configurations such as (53b). These can instead be analyzed as involving resumption in the possessor position, which we treat analogous to subject resumption as involving null resumptive triggering agreement (57). This corresponds to the analysis in (55) in which there is no crossover at all.
For this reason, Hewett (2023) argues that this kind of primary crossover configuration is inconclusive for determining whether movement or base generation is involved.| (58) | *[ ɔdaduani biara ]1 bɔ mpae s dabidabi aban bɛ-hu [ gyimifoO |
| prisoner every pray prayer comp someday government fut-see fool | |
| no ]1 mɔbɔ | |
| def mercy | |
| ‘Every prisoner1 prays that the government will have mercy on the fool1 someday.’ |

| (60) | Secondary Weak Crossover |
| a. [Whose1 mother]2____2 hates him1 ? | |
| b. *[Whose1 mother]2 does [his1 sister] hate ____2 ? |
| (61) | Secondary WCO in Akan |
| a. Me-bisá-a ɛsέ [ hwan1 ba ]2 na ɔ2-hú-uɛɛ no1 | |
| 1sg-ask-pstcomp who child foc 3sg.sbj-see-pst 3sg.obj | |
| ‘I asked whose1 child saw him1.’ | |
| b. *Me-bisá-a ɛɛsέ [ hwán1 ba ɛɛ]2 na n1-adanfo sómá-a no2 | |
| 1sg-ask-pstcomp who child foc poss-friend send-pst 3sg.obj | |
| ‘I asked whose1 child his1 friend sent.’ |
3.5. Evidence for Base-Generated Ā-constructions in Akan
| (62) | No tonal overwriting or anti-agreement in thedéέ-construction |
| a. Kofi1 na ɛ/ɔ1-káń-n kŕataá nó | |
| Kofi foc 3-/3sg.sbj-read-pst book def | |
| ‘It is Kofi who read the book.’ | |
| b. Kofi1 déέ, *ɛ/ɔ1-kan-n kŕataá nó | |
| Kofi top *3-/3sg.sbj-read-pst book def | |
| ‘As for Kofi, he read the book.’ |
| (63) | a. Kofí nim [CP sɛ Ám!má pɛ Yaw ] |
| Kofi know that Ama love Yaw | |
| ‘Kofi knows that Ama loves Yaw.’ | |
| b. Kofí nim Ám!má1 [CP sɛ O1-pɛ Yaw ] | |
| Kofi know Ama that 3sg.sbj-love Yaw | |
| ‘Kofi knows Ama to be someone who loves Yaw.’ |
| (64) | Kofí nim Ám!má1 [CP sɛ {ɔ1-/*ɛ1-}pɛ Yaw ] | |
| Kofi know Ama that {3sg.sbj-/*3-}love Yaw | ||
| ‘Kofi knows of Ama that she loves Yaw.’ |
| (65) | a. *Kofi dwene Ám!má1 [CP sɛ ɔ1-pɛ Yaw ] |
| Kofi think Ama that 3sg.sbj-like Yaw | |
| Int: ‘Kofi thinks of Ama that she loves Yaw.’ | |
| b. *Kofi ka-a Ám!má1 [CP sɛ ɔ1-pɛ Yaw ] | |
| Kofi say-pst Ama that 3sg.sbj-like Yaw | |
| Int: ‘Kofi said of Ama that she loves Yaw.’ |
4. Discussion
4.1. The Resumption Profile of Akan
| (66) Some resumption profiles cross-linguistically 14 | ||||
| Island-sensitive? | Evidence for Ā-movement? | |||
| Crossover effects | Cyclicity effects | Reconstruction effects | ||
| Type Ia (Irish) | ✗ | ✗ | (✗) | — |
| Type Ib (Bulgarian) | ✗ | ✗ | — | ✗ |
| Type IIa (Vata) | ✓ | ✓ | — | — |
| Type IIb (Welsh) | (✓) | — | ✓ | ✓ |
| Type III (Scottish Gaelic?) | ✓ | — | ✓ | ✗ |
| Type IVa (Akan) | ✗ | (✓) | ✓ | ✓ |
| Type IVb (Jordanian Arabic) | ✗ | — | — | ✓ |
| Type IVc (Swedish) | ✗ | % | — | (✓) |
| Type IVd (Hebrew) | ✗ | (✓) | — | (✓) |
4.2. Analytical Consequences
4.2.1. Akan Resumption as Base Generation?
| (67) | Resumption as NP deletion |
| [… [DP NP nó … [ … [DP |
This alternative hypothesis can be conclusively dismissed, however, by considering cases in which a verb is linearly crossed while not being along the path of syntactic movement. If we take a sentential subject as in (69a) as a baseline, movement of a lower object will, under standard assumptions, not pass successive-cyclically through the complement clause to the noun ‘rumour’ inside the subject DP; although, it does cross it linearly. As (69b) shows, the verb inside the noun complement clause does not receive any high tones. For this reason, it becomes clear that we must reject a linear-based approach to tonal overwriting.16| (69) Tonal reflex only affects verbs along the movement path |
![]() |
| (70) | Long-distance dependency in Kinande (Schneider-Zioga 2009, p. 47) |
| ekihi1 kyo Kambale asi [CP nga kyo Yosefu akalengekanaya [CP | |
| what wh-agr Kambale know comp wh-agr Yosefu thinks | |
| nga kyo Mary’ akahuka ____ 1]] | |
| compwh-agr Mary cooks | |
| ‘What does Kambale know that Yosefu thinks that Mary cooks?’ |
On this view, the presence of wh-agreement could be linked to the presence of a binder in the specifier of C, for example, much like McCloskey (2002) assumes for aN-chains in Irish. The question now is whether we can apply the same analysis to Akan. We could in principle assume that tonal overwriting on a verb in a given clause is triggered by the presence of a base-generated pro-binder within that clause, for example. Here, the major challenge would be to differentiate between those base generation structures which trigger tonal overwriting and those which do not (in the déέ-construction, for example).
If the tonal reflex on a verb in Asante Twi tracks Ā-movement from, say, Spec-vP to Spec-CP, then we would correctly predict that we find the reflex both inside and outside of the island without actually having to posit movement out of the island.
This prediction is not borne out. Long-distance dependencies always exhibit tonal overwriting in all subordinate clauses along the path of movement.
This is not a pattern that we find. Akan does not, to the best of our knowledge, exhibit mixed chains of any kind. Assuming that Ā-dependencies in Akan are composed of a series of propletic binding relations raises the problem of then adequately constraining this mechanism. Once we have base generation and movement of operators, we seem to incorrectly predict the kind of mixed chains that we find in Irish and other languages.
This leads to a further issue in constraining the prolepsis theory of Ā-dependencies in Akan, while admittedly the island-insensitivity of nominal extraction is also challenging for the movement-based analysis that we will discuss in the following section; neither of the solutions that we will discuss there (island obviation by resumption or category-discriminating islands) extends straightforwardly to a theory involving a series of binding dependencies between null operators.4.2.2. Akan Resumption as Movement
| (76) | Pronoun Conversion |
| [CP DP1 [TP … [ … DP1 … ]] ⟹ [CP DP1 [TP … [ … pro1 … ]]] |
| (77) | * … [island … |
| (78) | Na Kwadwo pɛ sɛ ɔ-yɛ odusini1, nanso ɔ-a-n-yɛ ?bi1 / |
| pst Kwadwo want comp 3sg-fut-be herbalist but 3sg-perf-neg-be indef | |
| *no1 / ____1 | |
| 3sg.obj | |
| ‘Kwadwo wanted to become a herbalist, but he did not become (one)’ |
| (79) | a. Nípa na Kofi súró ____1 [CP ésánesέ ɔ-fέré {____1 / *nó1 } ] |
| person foc Kofi fear because 3sg.sbj-be.shy.of 3sg.obj | |
| ‘It’s people that Kofi really fears because he is shy of (them).’ | |
| b. Nípa yi1 na Kofi súró nó1 [CP ésánesέ ɔ-fέré { *____1 / | |
| person this foc Kofi fear 3sg.obj because 3sg.sbj-be.shy.of | |
| nó1 } ] | |
| 3sg.obj | |
| ‘It’s this person that Kofi really fears because he is shy of him.’ |
| 80 | a. [̣PP About whom ] do you wonder [CP whether to worry ____ PP ] ? |
| b. [DP Who ] do you wonder [CP whether to worry about ____DP ] ? |
On this view, predicate nominals, idiom chunks and non-specific indefinites are incompatible with (resumptive) pronouns because the deletion rule applies to NPs (in addition to VPs and PPs), meaning that there is no stranded determiner that could be realized as a pronoun. Nevertheless, since category-sensitive island effects apply to phrases with a ‘nominal’ core, both DP and NP extraction is island-insensitive regardless of the availability of a resumptive.| (82) | Determiner haplology effect (Saah 1994, pp. 153–154) |
| a. [DP AbOfrá [CP Op1 áa Kofí hú-u nó1 nó ]] á-ba | |
| child rel Kofi saw-pst 3sg.obj cd perf-come | |
| ‘The child that Kofi saw has come.’ | |
| b. [DP Onípá [CP Op1 áa ɔ1-tó-o [DP ndwóḿ nó ] (*nó) ]] yɛ-ɛ | |
| person rel 3sg.sbj-throw-pst song def cd do-pst | |
| adé | |
| something | |
| ‘The person who sang the song did well.’ |
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | However, we will see that in practice this is not necessarily the case, see Section 3.3 and Section 4.1. | ||||||||||||
| 2 | The situation surrounding islands in Welsh is complicated, to say the least. To varying degrees, both movement and gaps seem to be possible inside wh-islands and complement clauses to nouns (Borsley 2013; Borsley et al. 2007; Tallerman 1983), while neither is possible in relative clauses. Why exactly only relative clauses should count as complex NP islands is unclear (though perhaps operator movement plays a role here). | ||||||||||||
| 3 | Given the dichotomy we are considering at the moment, this would imply movement. However, this is actually not what Rouveret (2008) propose for Welsh. Instead, he favours an Agree-based approach similar to what Adger and Ramchand (2005) suggest for Scottish Gaelic, discussed in detail below. How exactly an Agree-based account derives the class of constructions that constitute islands has, to the best of our knowledge, still not been worked out. | ||||||||||||
| 4 | Schurr et al. (2024) provide a novel diagnostic for distinguishing gaps from null resumptives based on association with epithets in Shupamem. | ||||||||||||
| 5 | Note that Akan is optionally wh-in situ. The focus particle na does not surface in the in situ variant of (15). Since these constructions will be uninformative for present purposes, we will only discuss ex situ wh-questions and focus movement constructions. | ||||||||||||
| 6 | It is important to note that the CD is also possible, albeit optionally, in the na-focus construction. Here, the attachment height of the CD is less clear. It is possible that it attaches lower here. Previous research has claimed that the CD is used to mark an event as familiar (e.g., Boadi 1974), but Bombi et al. (2019) show that this is not the case for the CD in a na-focus construction (what they call ‘cleft-nó’). For relative clauses, they assume a different structure to the one in (16) where the CD is, in fact, the determiner modifying the head noun, but it is unclear to us how one can accommodate the additional determiner on this analysis. | ||||||||||||
| 7 | Note that the resumptive pronoun has the same form as anaphoric pronouns (following McCloskey’s Generalization; McCloskey 1990). Furthermore, inanimate anaphoric pronouns (like inanimate resumptive pronouns) must be dropped outside of the environments in (18) through (20) (see Korsah 2017, Section 2 for further discussion). | ||||||||||||
| 8 | Kandybowicz (2015) describes the aspectual particle -yɛ as a verbal resumptive, though the actual analysis involves insertion of a form to avoid a prosodically vacuous AsP domain (rather than genuine realization of a movement trace). The insertion of -yO does not avoid island violations (see Hein 2017). | ||||||||||||
| 9 | This assumption is far from trivial, however. Several authors have argued that, if implemented by Agree, base-generated resumption involving binding may also be subject to locality constraints (e.g., Adger and Ramchand 2005; Pan 2016; Rouveret 2008) and therefore potentially also successive-cyclic. | ||||||||||||
| 10 | It is also worth highlighting that the matrix subject does not appear to be a possible binder for the moved anaphor, indicating that reconstruction to an intermediate landing site is not possible (Barss 1986). | ||||||||||||
| 11 | A reviewer points out that this shows not only that reconstruction for Principle C is possible, but that it is obligatory. As far as we can tell, reconstruction is always obligatory with Ā-movement in Akan; while it has been argued that reconstruction for Principle C can be avoided with Late Merge (e.g., Lebeaux 1988, 1991), this does not seem to be an option in Akan. | ||||||||||||
| 12 | In this sense, an XP generated in an operator position, e.g., in Irish, would have to count as occupying an A-position for the purposes of binding. One way of characterizing this could be to say that all base-generated positions count as A-positions for the purposes of variable binding. | ||||||||||||
| 13 | That said, crossover effects have been argued to exist with island-insensitive resumption, as Hewett shows, which makes this more than just a theory-internal issue. | ||||||||||||
| 14 | Some clarifications are in order about this table. The brackets indicate that the status of this diagnostic is controversial or subject to additional caveats. First, the island sensitivity of resumption in Welsh is actually not so clear-cut. For Irish, the profile discussed is only for aN-chains. As McCloskey (2002) shows, aL-chains have Type II properties. The reason for the brackets around cyclicity effects is that there are so-called ‘mixed chains’ in which there can be both aN and aL complementizers in the same dependency, and while this can be readily analyzed as a kind of prolepsis, it certainly introduces another complication. Finally, since the baseline example of WCO in Akan is acceptable, for reasons discussed in Section 3.4, the argument for crossover effects relies on more complicated arguments. | ||||||||||||
| 15 | However, it should be noted that a movement derivation of resumption even in light of island-insensitivity was pursued as early as Perlmutter (1972) (also see Pesetsky 1998). The important distinction here, however, is that this line of analysis was not pursued in light of mismatched diagnostics for movement. | ||||||||||||
| 16 | Thanks to Matthew Hewett for pointing out this possibility and suggesting the context in (69) to test it. | ||||||||||||
| 17 | van Urk (2017) reports this kind of pattern for Dinka; while Dinka has a reflex of successive-cyclicity involving a particle ké at the edge of vP (van Urk 2018; van Urk and Richards 2015), this it not found when the dependency that reaches into the island terminates in a resumptive pronoun rather than a gap (van Urk 2017). The analysis that van Urk proposes is that there is base generation within the island and movement outside of it. | ||||||||||||
| 18 | However, note that this an example of one of Postal’s (1994, 1998) antipronominal contexts for English, however. This could potentially provide an independent reason why an overt pronoun is ruled out. With that said, if antipronominal contexts are characterized in semantic terms (Poole 2017), i.e., rejecting pronouns of a certain semantic type, it is unclear why the unpronounced version of this pronoun should differ in this regard. | ||||||||||||
| 19 | This is a typical parasitic gap configuration; however, it is unclear if Akan has parasitic gaps at all. If (79a) did contain a parasitic gap, we would expect it to alternative with an overt pronoun, as it does not. Furthermore, it would be somewhat puzzling why no parasitic gap is possible (79b). One would have to say that parasitic gaps may only be licensed by certain types of nominal extraction. For these reasons, we reject this possible line of analysis. | ||||||||||||
| 20 | The precise definition of a ‘nominal core’ is relevant when considering PP- and VP-extraction since these may also contain an NP, meaning that the constraint should presumably not be formulated in terms of straightforward domination of an NP category. For this reason, defining island-insensitivity in terms of nominal extended projections (Grimshaw 2000) might ultimately be the more desirable approach. | ||||||||||||
| 21 | Actually, it is not even a requirement that the determiners be homophonous for this effect to obtain. In relative clauses, the clausal determiner actually ‘agrees’ with the head noun, as seen with relatives clauses with a head noun that have the proximal determiner yi (see Saah 1994, p. 157). Here, this also triggers the same form of the clausal determiner (Saah 2010). This CD may appear next to a resumptive pronoun (83a), however, when adjacent to a genuine determiner, the CD must be absent (83b).
This is a useful observation as it is otherwise unclear in (82b) that it is actually the CD which is dropped, as its form is identical to the object’s determiner. Examples such as (82b) make this clear, however, as the two forms differ. |
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Korsah, S.; Murphy, A. The Absence of Islands in Akan: The Role of Resumption. Languages 2024, 9, 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9040127
Korsah S, Murphy A. The Absence of Islands in Akan: The Role of Resumption. Languages. 2024; 9(4):127. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9040127
Chicago/Turabian StyleKorsah, Sampson, and Andrew Murphy. 2024. "The Absence of Islands in Akan: The Role of Resumption" Languages 9, no. 4: 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9040127
APA StyleKorsah, S., & Murphy, A. (2024). The Absence of Islands in Akan: The Role of Resumption. Languages, 9(4), 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9040127



