Determining whether a noun licenses a declarative clause












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In The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (p 1351-52):




[7] i a. The stipulation that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously.



b. *The codicil that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously.




The Cambridge Grammar says this about [7]:




The examples in [i] belong to the integrated head + complement construction. Stipulation licenses a declarative complement, but codicil does not: hence the ungrammaticality of [ib].




I understand how stipulation licenses the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously), but I don't understand how codicil fails to license the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously).



How do you know whether a noun licenses a declarative clause or not?









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    In The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (p 1351-52):




    [7] i a. The stipulation that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously.



    b. *The codicil that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously.




    The Cambridge Grammar says this about [7]:




    The examples in [i] belong to the integrated head + complement construction. Stipulation licenses a declarative complement, but codicil does not: hence the ungrammaticality of [ib].




    I understand how stipulation licenses the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously), but I don't understand how codicil fails to license the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously).



    How do you know whether a noun licenses a declarative clause or not?









    share

























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      In The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (p 1351-52):




      [7] i a. The stipulation that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously.



      b. *The codicil that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously.




      The Cambridge Grammar says this about [7]:




      The examples in [i] belong to the integrated head + complement construction. Stipulation licenses a declarative complement, but codicil does not: hence the ungrammaticality of [ib].




      I understand how stipulation licenses the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously), but I don't understand how codicil fails to license the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously).



      How do you know whether a noun licenses a declarative clause or not?









      share













      In The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (p 1351-52):




      [7] i a. The stipulation that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously.



      b. *The codicil that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously.




      The Cambridge Grammar says this about [7]:




      The examples in [i] belong to the integrated head + complement construction. Stipulation licenses a declarative complement, but codicil does not: hence the ungrammaticality of [ib].




      I understand how stipulation licenses the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteen annoyed him enormously), but I don't understand how codicil fails to license the declarative clause (that Harry could not touch the money until he was eighteenannoyed him enormously).



      How do you know whether a noun licenses a declarative clause or not?







      complements





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