Privileged Access, V2 and the that-trace effect

Authors

  • Roland Hinterhölzl University of Venice

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18148/zs/2026-2006

Keywords:

that-trace effect, high and low V2, extension of the phase edge, economy of derivation, referential anchoring, big DP-hypothesis

Abstract

The paper discusses the famous that-trace effect and the strategies used to circumvent it in German, English, French and Italian. While the data have been widely discussed in the literature, the paper proposes a new account of the phenomenon underlies these strategies and argues that a violation of economy in subject movement is at the core of the that-trace effect. In particular, it is argued that the that-trace effect targets subjects and not objects or adjuncts, since subjects stand out in having privileged access to the C-domain. Cases in which subjects to not give rise to that-trace effects and cases where other elements than subject do give rise to a that-trace effect, will be explained as falling out from grammatical system of anchoring arguments to the context.

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Published

2026-06-30

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How to Cite

Hinterhölzl, Roland. “Privileged Access, V2 and the That-Trace Effect”. Journal of the Linguistic Society of Germany, vol. 45, no. 1, June 2026, https://doi.org/10.18148/zs/2026-2006.