- Map-Legend:
- binding
- Mixed Data
- No Data
| Language | Question | Subquestion | Color | Parameter | Value | Preference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amharic | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| Czech | 35 | a | binding | 1 | NA | |
| Jula | 35 | a | binding | 1 | NA | |
| Gagauz | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| Huarong Chinese | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| Standard Mandarin | 35 | a | binding | 1 | NA | |
| Nepali | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| Polish | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| English | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| Standard German | 35 | a | binding | 1 | ||
| Thai | 35 | a | binding | 1 | NA | |
| Upper Sorbian | 35 | a | binding | 1 | NA | |
| Vietnamese | 35 | a | binding | 1 | NA | |
| Oromo | 35 | a | binding | 1 |
(35) Weak crossover: Can a contrastively focused argument bind a pronoun?
If you could establish islandhood and crossover constraints in section 3 already, you can skip this section and move on to (39). Otherwise, if the language can (optionally) front a contrastive focus.
a) Contrast = subject; pronoun embedded in the object
Prompt: I had already heard some stories about parents betraying their children, but I was really shocked to learn that Bill betrayed his daughter.
No! John betrayed his daughter.