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    Pleonastic subjects are comparable to 'There' in 'There i... — Carmelics
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    Supports→'It' in (19) does not indicate an argument

    Pleonastic subjects are comparable to 'There' in 'There is something in the garden', which does not indicate an argument

    Philosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of Language

    Related

    'It' in (19) does not indicate an argument'It' in (19) functions as a pleonastic subject

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    'It' in (19) does not indicate an argument76%

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    If every English sentence needs a subject of some kind, (18D) must be modified: either by displacing ‘John’, as in (18S); or by inserting a pleonastic subject, as in (19). Note that in (19), ‘It’ does not indicate an argument; compare ‘There’ in ‘There is something in the garden’. Appeal to displacement also lets one distinguish the superficially parallel sentences (20) and (21).

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