Forthcoming: The licensing and usage of topic drop in German

Lisa Schäfer

Synopsis

This book is concerned with the licensing and usage of the elliptical construction topic drop in German. The term topic drop refers to the omission of the preverbal constituent in declarative verb-second sentences, for example, the omission of the subject ich (‘I’) in the sentence Bin gleich zurück (‘Am right back’). Topic drop exists in most of the Germanic verb-second languages and typically occurs in spoken language and text types such as SMS, chats, notes, etc.

While much of the previous research has focused on individual specific properties of topic drop, often adopting a purely theoretical perspective, this book presents a systematic investigation of both the syntactic properties and usage conditions of topic drop based on empirical evidence from a corpus study and 12 acceptability rating studies.

The first part of the book investigates the licensing of topic drop, in particular its restriction to the preverbal ‘prefield’ position. The results of four rating studies on topic drop in different prefield configurations lead to a refined prefield condition based on proposals by Rizzi (1994) and Freywald (2020) that is independent of topicality. Moreover, they inform the discussion on the most suitable syntactic analysis of topic drop, supporting a PF-deletion approach.

The second part of the book presents and tests an information-theoretic account of topic drop usage that builds on the Uniform Information Density hypothesis (Levy & Jaeger 2007). In a corpus study and seven rating studies, several potential usage factors are investigated, including grammatical person and verb predictability. The results provide initial evidence suggesting that topic drop usage can be explained by general processing principles: The prefield constituent is omitted when it is redundant and realized overtly when it facilitates the processing of the following verb. This information-theoretic explanation is based on independently evidenced processing mechanisms, bundles isolated claims from the theoretical literature, and allows for a unified analysis of topic drop with other types of ellipsis and reduction.

Author Biography

Lisa Schäfer, Saarland University

Lisa Schäfer is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of German Studies at Saarland University. Her research interests lie at the interface between theoretical syntax, information structure, and psycholinguistics. Using experimental methods and corpus studies, she works on the grammar and usage of ellipsis, the comprehension of the generic masculine, and dialect syntactic phenomena. This book is a slightly revised version of her unpublished doctoral thesis, which she completed in the context of the CRC 1102 Information Density and Linguistic Encoding at Saarland University.

Book cover

Published

January 22, 2025
LaTeX source on GitHub

Online ISSN

2750-557X

Print ISSN

2750-5588
Cite as
Schäfer, Lisa. Forthcoming. The licensing and usage of topic drop in German. (Open Germanic Linguistics). Berlin: Language Science Press.

License

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.