Control vs. raising
Control must be distinguished from
raising, though the two can be outwardly similar. Control predicates semantically select their arguments, as stated above. Raising predicates, in contrast, do not semantically select (at least) one of their dependents. The contrast is evident with the so-called
raising-to-object verbs (=
ECM-verbs) such as
believe,
expect,
want, and
prove. Compare the following a- and b-sentences: ::a. Fred asked
you to read it. -
asked is an object control verb. ::b. Fred expects
you to read it. -
expects is a raising-to-object verb. ::a. Jim forced
her to say it. -
forced is an object control verb. ::b. Jim believed
her to have said it. -
believes is a raising-to-object verb. The control predicates
ask and
force semantically select their object arguments, whereas the raising-to-object verbs do not. Instead, the object of the raising verb appears to have "risen" from the subject position of the embedded predicate, in this case from the embedded predicates
to read and
to have said. In other words, the embedded predicate is semantically selecting the argument of the matrix predicate. What this means is that while a raising-to-object verb takes an object dependent, that dependent is not a semantic argument of that raising verb. The distinction becomes apparent when one considers that a control predicate like
ask requires its object to be an animate entity, whereas a raising-to-object predicate like
expects places no semantic limitations on its object dependent.
Diagnostic Tests Expletives The different predicate types can be identified using
expletive there. Expletive
there can appear as the "object" of a raising-to-object predicate, but not of a control verb, e.g. ::a. *Fred asked
there to be a party. - Expletive
there cannot appear as the object of a control predicate. ::b. Fred expects
there to be a party. - Expletive
there can appear as the object of a raising-to-object predicate. ::a. *Jim forced
there to be a party. - Expletive
there cannot appear as the object of a control predicate. ::b. Jim believes
there to have been a party. - Expletive
there can appear as the object of a raising-to-object predicate. The control predicates cannot take expletive
there because
there does not fulfill the semantic requirements of the control predicates. Since the raising-to-object predicates do not select their objects, they can easily take expletive
there.
Idioms Control and raising also differ in how they behave with
idiomatic expressions. Idiomatic expressions retain their meaning in a raising construction, but they lose it when they are arguments of a control verb. See the examples below featuring the idiom "The cat is out of the bag", which has the meaning that facts that were previously hidden are now revealed. ::a. The cat wants to be out of the bag. - There is no possible idiomatic interpretation in the control construction. ::b. The cat seems to be out of the bag. - The idiomatic interpretation is retained in the raising construction. The explanation for this fact is that raising predicates do not semantically select their arguments, and therefore their arguments are not interpreted compositionally, as the subject or object of the raising predicate. Arguments of the control predicate, on the other hand, have to fulfill their semantic requirements, and interpreted as the argument of the predicate compositionally. This test works for object control and
ECM too. :a. I asked the cat to be out of the bag. - There is no possible idiomatic interpretation in the control construction. :b. I believe the cat to be out of the bag. - The idiomatic interpretation is retained in the raising construction. ==Notes==